The Solar System

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
PART 4 | THE SOLAR SYSTEM

Encke
Gap

Cassini
Division

The C ring
contains
boulder-size
chunks of ice,
whereas most
particles in the A
and B rings are more
like golf balls, down to
dust-size ice crystals.
Further, C ring particles
are less than half as bright
as particles in the A and B
rings. Cassini observations
show that the C ring particles
contain less ice and more minerals.

As in the
case of
Jupiter’s ring,
Saturn’s rings lie
inside the planet’s
Roché limit where
the ring particles
cannot pull themselves
together to form a moon.

Because it is so dark, the C ring
was once called the crepe ring.

An astronaut could swim through the rings.
Although the particles orbit Saturn at high
velocity, all particles at the same distance from
the planet orbit at about the same speed, so they
collide gently at low velocities. If you could visit
the rings, you could push your way from one icy
particle to the next. This artwork is based on a
model of particle sizes in the A ring.

Earth to scale

C ring

A ringA ring

B ringB ring

C ring

Visual-wavelength image

NASA

The brilliant rings of Saturn are made up of billions of ice particles ranging from
microscopic specks to chunks bigger than a house. Each particle orbits Saturn in
its own circular orbit. Much of what astronomers know about the rings was learned when
the Voyager 1 spacecraft flew past Saturn in 1980, followed by the Voyager 2 spacecraft
in 1981. The Cassini Spacecraft reached orbit around Saturn in 2004. From Earth,
astronomers see three rings labeled A, B, and C. Voyager and Cassini images reveal
over a thousand ringlets within the rings.


Saturn’s rings can’t be leftover material from the formation of Saturn. The rings are made
of ice particles, and the planet would have been so hot when it formed that it would have
vaporized and driven away any icy material. Rather, the rings must be debris from
collisions between passing comets, or other objects, and Saturn’s icy moons. Such
impacts should occur every 100 million years or so, and they would scatter ice
throughout Saturn’s system of moons. The ice would quickly settle into the
equatorial plane, and some would become trapped in rings. Although the
ice may waste away due to meteorite impacts and damage from radiation
in Saturn’s magnetosphere, new impacts could replenish the rings with
fresh ice. The bright, beautiful rings you see today may be only a
temporary enhancement caused by an impact that occurred
since the extinction of the dinosaurs.


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