Remains of Shattered Moon Found in Saturn's Rings 112
Riding with Robots writes "Scientists have announced that they have used images from the robotic spacecraft Cassini to find moonlets embedded in Saturn's outer rings that are likely the remains of a larger moon that was shattered by an asteroid or comet. The team from the University of Colorado at Boulder that made the discovery has now posted details and pictures."
That's no moon... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:That's no moon... (Score:5, Funny)
xkcd (Score:1)
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There's only been about 300 of them, but the author seems to be very much in tune with the /. crowd. There are only so many popular nerdy themes! I thoroughly recommend you browse through his archive - it's a very fun hour or so. Now, off to the String theory video thread to see if anyone's posted this [xkcd.com] yet.
In an unrelated note, posters warning of possible raptor entry points have appeared in my building recently. (It's not my doing.)
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Re:That's no moon... (Score:5, Funny)
I blame this moon catastrophe on Global Warming.
After all, before global warming, no one had ever in history seen a moon being decimated like this. I estimate that by 2050 half of the moons will be destroyed by meteors and death stars. The moons of some planets and pseudo planets may be spared, but most will be devastated. Their rubble will fall upon our metropolitan areas and million dollar summer homes, leaving us homeless and starving for food.
We have all seen the horrific California wildfires this week. We've also seen the huge fireballs created by Schoemaker-Levy, which was near to this moon explosion. Obviously, something is going extremely wrong here!
I propose that we blow these moons before they get blown themselves. We can then control how and where the remnants fall. To do this, we need an old song that's still catchy, a bunch of nukes and some hillbillies with mental and drug disorders.
This program may very well hinder our economy. Because of this, any country that endeavors to be more advanced than any other country will be taxed into oblivion. We must have equality when taxing every single person for this project, after all. With enough hard work, we shall prevail over this imminent danger!
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Global Warming is the problem, but not for that reason. W
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Perfect. At least you showed some wisdom by posting as AC.
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There, matey, I know a dead space station when I see one, and I'm looking at one right now! 'I's not pinin'! 'I's passed on! This space station is no more! It has ceased to be! 'It's expired and gone to meet 'is maker! 'I's a stiff! Bereft of life, 'I rests in peace! 'I's off the twig! 'I's kicked the bucket, 'I's shuffled off 'is mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleedin' choir invisibile!! THIS IS AN EX-SPACE STATION!!
There, I corrected that for you!
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There, matey, I know a dead space station when I see one, and I'm looking at one right now! 'I's not pinin'! 'I's passed on! This space station is no more! It has ceased to be! 'It's expired and gone to meet 'is maker! 'I's a stiff! Bereft of life, 'I rests in peace! 'I's off the twig! 'I's kicked the bucket, 'I's shuffled off 'is mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleedin' choir invisibile!! THIS IS AN EX-SPACE STATION!!
Well, I'd better replace it, then. [Quick glances at console.] Sorry squire, I've had a look 'round the back of the planet, and uh, we're right out of space stations.
I see. I see, I get the picture.
I got a shuttle.
[pause]
Pray, does it shoot planet-destroying death rays?
Nnnnot really.
WELL IT'S HARDLY A BLOODY REPLACEMENT, IS IT?!!???!!?
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I nominate my new laptop; with the crapware and Vista, it qualifies.
Have you ever seen... (Score:2, Funny)
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So, what do the rings look like from inside? (Score:2)
Re:So, what do the rings look like from inside? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:So, what do the rings look like from inside? (Score:5, Informative)
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Chris Mattern
Re:So, what do the rings look like from inside? (Score:5, Funny)
Put another way, if you are a couple of k's below the rings on one side, you'll be a couple of k's above on the other. Between those two points are all the other rocks that have been persuaded (pummeled) into not bucking the system. Also they are very big. And angry. And very willing to give you a bit of the newtons laws up the wazoo to persuade you to move with the herd again.
You might also be eaten by a grue.
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As I see it objects which have a little bit of out of plane momentum will transfer that component to the ring particles they collide with and drop into a lower orbit in the ring plane. Particles with a lot of out of plane momentum will fall right into Saturn. The out of plane momentum can't be turned into momentum in the ring plane.
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Expected, but cool nevertheless (Score:5, Informative)
Neptune is another planet with rings which are far fainter, so it is likely that Neptune's lunar disintegration event happened to a much smaller object somewhat longer ago.
Uranus, if it ever had rings, has swept clean its area. While not as pretty as a ringed planet, Uranus may pose less of a danger to probes since less damaging material encircles the planet.
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The particles in Saturns rings are in no more of a decaying orbit around Saturn than the Moon is around Earth. The demise of the rings around Saturn will occur when they eventually dissipate into space over the course of tens of millions of years.
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You mean tens of billions I assume? And by dissipate you mean sublimate?
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The PP is right, it's tens of millions, at least according to one of Isaac Asimov's science essays I read a while back.
In astronomical timescales, structures of the magnitude of Saturn's rings exist for the equivalent of an eyeblink. In fact, it's not too much of a stretch to assume that each of the gas giants have gone through more than one of these "brief" events. Humanity is quite lucky to be around during one of them.
Too bad it wasn't Jupiter with the large-scale str
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What happens over long timescales is that the rings spread through collisions and gravitational encounters. Some particles are sent inwards, others outwards. (More of the former than the latter, typically.) Eventually, the particles will either get close enough to the planet to feel the atmosphere (the D ring is around 5,000 km from the 'top' of the atmosphere already) or spread far enough out that they'll get swept up by a moon.
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I bleach my ring you insensitive clod!
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I'm quite sure that probes pose much more of a danger to Uranus.
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In Soviet Russia, Uranus probes you!
Re:Expected, but cool nevertheless (Score:5, Informative)
Uranus has rings right now...
No, that's not a joke, I'm serious, it does [wikipedia.org].
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What's particularly striking is how the outer rings are perpendicular to the rings right on Uranus. I can't imagine that they'd have been created as part of some natural discharge from Uranus.
You're really stretching it (Score:1, Insightful)
I can't help but suspect that you are manipulating Uranus for cheap laughs
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Those are the assteroids.
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I hope you realize what you've just said?
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But despite the rings, I was amused to learn that Uranus has a wet surface. If this is true, it's not out of the realm of possibility that there may be something growing on Uranus. The pictures also indicate a lot of gas, so I wouldn't be too fast to pull the plug on Uranus. Certainly more exploration and examination of Uranus is warranted.
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As I've noted in another reply, the evolutionary path of rings is not entirely clear. There are a myriad of processes, from collisional grinding to accretion to gravitational scattering to resonances to E&M effects that play roles in the story. How large a role each plays and the timescales are generally a matter of debate. It is possible, according to some researchers, that the rings are as old as the planet (or very near
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I hear the starship Enterprise does much the same thing with Klingons.
I disagree with you on one matter though sir...
I believe Uranus is in more danger of probes, especially with age.
The alternatives (Score:1)
Two hypotheses prevail as to how Saturn acquired its seven rings.
One is that the rings were born at the same time as the planet itself -- they were left-over debris that became enslaved to the gas giant, doomed to orbit it for eternity.
The other is that the rings were the remains of large icy moons that broke into smaller pieces over time.
The problem with this latter theory has been that collisions of such a kind normally create debris in a wide range of sizes, from big lumps a kilometer (half a mile) wide to pebbles a few centimetres (inches) across.
The big pieces are already known, for there are kilometre- (half-mile) moons called Pan, Daphnis and Atlas that jostle their way around the rings, and photographs taken by scout probes have shown countless small pieces.
Until last year, what was missing were the medium-size pieces.
Leftovers (Score:2, Interesting)
"It seems unlikely that moonlets are remainders of a single catastrophic event that created the whole ring system, because in this case a uniform distribution would emerge"
From the summary:
"...moonlets embedded in Saturn's outer rings that are likely the remains of a larger moon that was shattered by an asteroid or comet."
So the article says that it's unlikely that it was a single event. The summary says that it was a moon being shattered, which of course would fit the definition of a single catastrophic event. What am I overlooking here?
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Then over the millenia several of those moons became involved in collisions that generated the moonlets which we see today.
chunky much? (Score:1)
Re:chunky much? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Shattered is the past (Score:3, Funny)
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Clearly... (Score:2, Funny)
My God! Power of such magnitude! (Score:2)
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Myth Busters (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Myth Busters (Score:4, Informative)
Thanks China for your latest contribution to the Greater Terra Ring Project!
We are the people of Earth (Score:2)
Glad you could join us
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Old News (Score:5, Funny)
Typical slashdot; recycled news from millions of years ago This story is probably a dupe from then.
A ring is way cooler than a moon... (Score:1)
And the tides are overrated anyway, I guess.
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Saturn's rings
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Cassini = Rosalind Franklin? (Score:2)
Just a thought.
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If you read http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/spacecraft/ [nasa.gov] it's notable that Cassini is a nuclear-powered robot that processes data "in situ" from remote and direct sensing equipment. It's not jus
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In that case, All Hail to the people who wrote that software !!
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I just knew it ! (Score:2)
Shattered moon? (Score:2)
Nothing New (Score:1)
So that's what happened to Luclin! (Score:2)
Saturn's rings. Ice. Water. Life remains? (Score:1)
In 1952, Isaac Asimov wrote a story [wikipedia.org] called "The Martian Way", where colonists on Mars got sick of paying Earth to export water (and Earth politicians said the colonists were Wasters anyhow). The Martian Scavengers flew to Saturn, chose a large fragment of ice, reshaped it into a cylinder, embeded their ships in it, and flew it like a giant ship back to Mars. Using the fragment's ice as reaction mass, they
you know (Score:1, Flamebait)
Moonlets Not News! (Score:2)
What this new paper finds is some new propellers and that these moonlets might exist only within a belt in the rings.
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Too cool (Score:1)
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