Saturn's A-ring Soaks Up Debris Ejected from Nearby Moon 64
ScienceDaily is running a story about the recently discovered interaction between Saturn's A-ring and one of Saturn's small moons, Enceladus. Thanks to data from Cassini, scientists have discovered that ejected matter from Enceladus' ice geysers is absorbed into the A-ring, where it is then trapped. We discussed the geysers themselves a few years ago, and researchers have been working since then to determine where the material was going. Quoting:
"This is the latest surprising phenomenon associated with the ice geysers of Enceladus to be discovered or confirmed by Cassini scientists. Earlier, the geysers were found to be responsible for the content of the E-ring. Next, the whole magnetic environment of Saturn was found to be weighed down by the material spewing from Enceladus, which becomes plasma -- a gas of electrically charged particles. Now, Cassini scientists confirm that the plasma, which creates a donut-shaped cloud around Saturn, is being snatched by Saturn's A-ring, which acts like a giant sponge where the plasma is absorbed."
Cosmos reference: (Score:3, Insightful)
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Same problem (Score:5, Funny)
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Moons creating moons? (Score:3)
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And if it could, I'd think it should have happened many million years ago already?
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Re:Moons creating moons? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Moons creating moons? (Score:4, Informative)
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So you're saying that putting something inside the A ring would likely a hole tear?
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Re:Moons creating moons? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Moons creating moons? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Moons creating moons? (Score:4, Interesting)
IANAAP, and I'm not disagreeing with the basic point of what you are saying, but...
from the link you provided, the radius of the Roche limit (1) depends on the structural integrity of the satellite, not just a constant radius from the stronger body, and thus (2) does not apply at all to the pulverized bits of the weaker body.
The Saturn A ring therefore decorates a particular Roche limit that applied to some other body that was pulverized in the past, and not a guaranteed "point of no moons" around Saturn. If the Roche limit were not based on the structural integrity of the moon, then even the broken boulders of an ex-moon would be further pulverized into rocks, then sand, and finally nano-dust. If a boulder survives inside the original body's Roche limit, it must be because it has a new Roche limit that is closer to Saturn.
While I admit that the pulverized bits are unlikely to coalesce into a moon, I wouldn't say they're impossible. If something were to cause a strong self-attractive force, say, some ionizing comet or who knows, the FSM's noodly appendages, a moon that developed into a highly rigid structure could continue to survive there. If we someday mine asteroids in the region, structural integrity of manmade or man-inhabited objects will obviously be of prime importance.
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Re:Moons creating moons? (Score:4, Informative)
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Also, existing satellites don't break up inside to the Roche limit. Pan and Daphnis are most likely within this limit, yet persist. Atlas, Prometheus, Pandora, and maybe even Janus and Epimetheus are potentially inside the Roche limit, depending on your choice of assum
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I don't know, I'm not a physicist. I'd expect it to depend on a number of factors, such as tensile strength, size of the body, size of the primary and how far inside the limit it is. Of course, as a layman ICBW. That's why I made sure to point out that they might or might not break up.
Go to Radio Shack (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah, that used to happen to me back when I listened to cassettes, too. A decent degausser will fix it.
Hey! (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Hey! (Score:5, Funny)
Soaking up ejected debris? (Score:1)
Re:Soaking up ejected debris? (Score:4, Funny)
heh heh "A-ring" heh heh "Moon" heh heh heh...
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Is This New? (Score:5, Informative)
It's a bit difficult to tell from the article what the point of the new research is, but I will say that even confirming this with new, perhaps more telling, measurements is still useful result, even if I'm remembering correctly and this isn't a new idea.
Heh, two "sponges" in one day (Score:1)
time to become a gas station (Score:1)
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A-ring, E-ring ... (Score:1)
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Too Small (Score:1)
Seriously, I wonder how such a relatively small moon like Enceladus can have such strong tidal heating. It just seems too puny for that kind of thing.
Oblig. (Score:1)
ice geysers? (Score:3, Informative)
If anything it looks like the solar corona, or a comet perhaps?
ahh, here we go
http://www.astrobio.net/news/modules.php?file=article&name=News&op=modload&sid=1797 [astrobio.net]
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I don't often hear "geyser" used for Enceladus, by the way. (I think it was tossed around early after the discovery, and then shot down for technical reasons.) "Plume" refers to the whole eruption and "jet" to the individual sources that merge to form the plume. That's certain the nomenclature used in the imaging team and, from what I've heard
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What is it about a columnar or conical jet that makes them not geysers?
Wha.....? (Score:1)
Think I saw this on the Frontier flight (Score:2)