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Space Science

Looking For Saturn's Lost Ring 11

An Onimous Cow Herd writes: "For the first time in 30 years, an occultation of Saturn will occur on Feb 20th (N.America/ W.Africa only). The occultation will allow observers to confirm the existance of Saturns fabled lost ring (Schaer's Ring), first detected (but not confirmed) in 1908.
This link gives more information and advice on finding the ring."
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Looking For Saturn's Lost Ring

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  • It's Saturns lost ring, not Saurons lost ring - and there's no frigging hobbits either...
  • Why isnt this appearing on the front page? (other than the small link). I have my prefs showing science.
    • Check the icon. The story is marked as 'space', not 'science'. You'll want to turn that category on as well if you want to see stories as this.

      Off-topic, I know, but oh well.
    • Not all stories are posted to the front page. I guess some aren't deemed significant enough to make it there. Check the left side of the front page to see new stories posted to the individual sections.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    The moon is a 1/2-degree diameter disk sweeping the sky in pretty much the same plane as the planets. So it occults planets and stars quite frequently.

    Here are pictures [spaceweather.com] from the Nov/Dec 2001 series on encounter, a few months ago!
    • Well, yes, lunar occulatations are not rare, per se. They should be about as common as eclipses, over all (to within a factor of 10). But the Moon's orbit is inclined 15 degrees to the ecliptic (note: not to Earth's equator, but the ecliptic). That takes it substantially out of the plane of the solar system as seen from Earth. Occultations can only occur when the Moon is at its nodes (cross the ecliptic). That happens twice a month, but then you have to have a planet in the right 1/2 degree of sky at that time.

      So they don't happen quite as often as all that. Plus, it you want to see the planet do cool things, you want a Moon around new. Otherwise, the Moon's light washes out your ability to see much of the planet.
  • Unpredictable? (Score:2, Informative)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 )
    (* Nine months after the Voyager 1, Voyager 2 arrived at Saturn. Between the two visits, the structure of Ring F had somehow changed dramatically. *)

    This suggests that the outer thin rings change in nature. They might be affected by the timing of moonlet collisions or ice volcanos on a nearby moon. IOW, there may be nothing to see at any given time.

"Sometimes insanity is the only alternative" -- button at a Science Fiction convention.

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