Astronomy

(Ann) #1

ASTRONEWS


Earth’s
axial tilt
23.5°

Jan. 2015July 2015Jan. 2016July 2016Jan. 2017July 2017Jan. 2018July 2018Jan. 2019July 2019Jan. 2020July 2020Jan. 2021July 2021

0.0°


  • 0.5°


2.0°

2.5°

South latitude at center of Jupiter’s disk

0.5°

1.0°

1.5°

3.0°

3.5°

Date

Jupiter’s
axial tilt


Io

Jupiter’s equatorial plane

Sub-Earth point

Subsolar point

Europa
CallistoGanymede

Jupiter

WWW.ASTRONOMY.COM 19

EARLY EARTH. Scientists recently modeled an extended period of bombardment that took place on Earth after the
Moon formed, finding that Earth accreted two to five times more material during this time than expected.

Saturn is known for its stunning — and mysterious
— ring system. The age of the rings in particular
has intrigued astronomers for centuries: Are they as
old as the planet itself, or a relatively new feature?
New evidence from the final months of the Cassini
spacecraft’s operation has revealed that Saturn’s
rings are just a few hundred million years old.
That evidence includes the mass of the rings,
which Cassini measured during its Grand Finale
passes between the planet and the rings. The rings
are light, roughly equivalent to the mass of Saturn’s
moon Mimas. And according to planetary scientists’
best theories connecting the age and mass of the
rings, “this is a clear indication that the rings did
not form together with Saturn,” said Luciano Iess of
the Sapienza University of Rome and leader of
Cassini’s radio experiment team, at the American
Geophysical Union Fall 2017 meeting.
Additional evidence comes from 12 years of
measurements from the Cosmic Dust Analyzer on
Cassini. The experiment measured the rate at which
micrometeorites accrete onto and darken the rings;
darker rings indicate an older age. This flux is actu-
ally about 10 times greater than previously
believed, darkening the rings faster than predicted
and indicating their age is only about 150 million to
300 million years.
This new evidence may finally resolve the ques-
tion of the age of Saturn’s rings. NASA’s Voyager
spacecraft returned data that indicated the rings
were young in the 1980s, but astronomers strug-
gled to explain why. Now that the Voyager data are
confirmed, only one question remains: How did the
rings form in the first place? — A.K.

Saturn’s rings are


a recent addition


JUPITER GETS TIPSY


YOUTH AND BEAUTY. Evidence from Cassini has finally
helped scientists pin down the age of Saturn’s rings to a
few hundred million years. If you traveled to the Triassic
Period and viewed Saturn through a telescope, you might
be sorely disappointed. NASA/JPL-CALTECH/SPACE SCIENCE INSTITUTE

ASTRONOMY

: ROEN KELLY

TAKE IT TO THE LIMIT. Earthbound observers always
see an equatorial view of Jupiter because the gas giant’s
axis tilts just 3° from perpendicular to the planet’s orbit
around the Sun. From the Sun’s perspective, the latitude
of the subsolar point — the spot at the center of the jovian
disk — can extend up to 3.56°. From Earth, which adds its own
orbital motion to the equation, the latitude of the sub-Earth
point can reach 3.88°. Both values hit their maximums south
of Jupiter’s equator in April 2018. — Richard Talcott

The last time
Jupiter’s south
pole tipped
closest to Earth,
in April 2006, the
moon Ganymede
appeared well out
of line with the
planet’s equator.
ALAN FRIEDMAN

Io, Europa, and
Ganymede (left to
right) lined up with
Jupiter’s equator
in early 2015, the
most recent time
the jovian system
appeared edge-on
to Earth. JOHN CHUMACK

Jupiter’s
four large
moons orbit
in the planet’s
equatorial
plane, so they
do not currently
line up.

The time it would have taken
to digitize the Apollo 11
mission recordings on existing
equipment, before a University of Texas at
Dallas team recently developed a faster method.

170
YEARS

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FAC T
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