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E-mail this article For Immediate Release
October 7, 2009
Contacts: Lee Tune, 301 405 4679 or ltune@umd.edu

Scientists Discover Huge, Nearly Invisible Ring Around Saturn

 

Artist rendering depicts diffuse ring. Saturn (shown enlarged in the circle to the right)is a mere dot at the center of the ring. Click Here for Larger Image.
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Keck

 

COLLEGE PARK, Md. -- Astronomers at the University of Maryland and the University of Virginia have discovered an enormous ring of dust and ice around Saturn associated with the planet's outer moon Phoebe. It is Saturn's largest and outermost ring by far, and thus is also the largest planetary ring in the solar system.

Using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, Doug Hamilton of the University of Maryland and colleagues Anne Verbiscer and Michael Skrutskie of the University of Virginia found the new ring, which lies in the outer reaches of the planet's gravitational field. Their findings are published online today in the journal Nature.

"This new ring around Saturn that is both huge and very diffuse," said Hamilton, whose work focuses on planetary satellites and rings, and on the origin and evolution of the Solar System. "Astronomers didn't see it before because the ring is so large and far out from the planet that you need a very wide field of view to find it. Furthermore, the ring particles are extremely dark which makes them difficult to see with visible light [telescopes]."

According to Hamilton, the ring has a diameter equivalent to 300 Saturns lined up side to side. It's also thick -- some 20 Saturns could fit into its vertical height.

A Clue in Black and White
Hamilton explained that one odd fact had long pointed to the possibility of an unseen ring of debris: another of Saturn's moons, Iapetus, is black on one side and white on the other. The strange coloration of Iapetus was detected more than three centuries ago by astronomer Giovanni Cassini who first spotted the moon in 1671, and some years later figured out it has both dark and light sides.

"Astronomers have long suspected that Saturn's outer moon Phoebe had a role in this riddle, perhaps as a source for dark material that had impacted one side of Iapetus," said Hamilton. Finding this new ring provides convincing evidence of that relationship."

 
This rendering shows the ring and two of the planet's moons Phoebe and Iapetus. The planet Saturn and its other rings (shown enlarged above the ring) are little more than a white spot in the center of the giant, diffuse ring of debris. Click Here for Larger Image.
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Keck
 
In their Nature article, Hamilton, Verbiscer and Skrutskie say that Phoebe -- by far the largest of Saturn's distant satellites -- "is probably the primary source of ejected debris in the outer saturnian system." Their paper notes Phoebe's orbit lies within the newly discovered ring and that both ring and moon rotate around Saturn in the same direction, a direction opposite to that of Iapetus and the other inner satellites. "Ring particles smaller than centimeters in size slowly migrate inward and many of them ultimately strike the dark leading face of Iapetus," they write.

Hamilton and his colleagues used Spitzer's infrared camera to scan through a patch of sky far from Saturn and a bit inside Phoebe's orbit. The scientists thought Phoebe might be circling around in a diffuse belt of dust kicked up from its minor collisions with comets -- a process similar to that around stars with dusty disks of planetary debris. And, when the scientists took a first look at their data, a broad band of dust stood out.

This ring would be difficult to see with visible-light telescopes because its particles are diffuse and may even extend far beyond main part of the ring material. The relatively small numbers of particles in the ring wouldn't reflect much visible light, especially out at Saturn where sunlight is weak.

The University of Maryland, College Park, the state's flagship university, is one of the nation's leading public research universities with many highly ranked programs, including astronomy, physics, computer science and aerospace engineering. In recent years Maryland has built major new partnerships with NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the National Institute of Standards and Technology and other neighboring federal agencies. In Fiscal Year 2009 research funding at the university soared to a record $518 million, placing the school in the top ten for research funding among all universities nationwide without a medical school.

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., manages the Spitzer Space Telescope mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Science operations are conducted at the Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of Technology, also in Pasadena. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.


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