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. 2009 Oct 22;461(7267):1098-100.
doi: 10.1038/nature08515. Epub 2009 Oct 7.

Saturn's largest ring

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Saturn's largest ring

Anne J Verbiscer et al. Nature. .

Abstract

Most planetary rings in the Solar System lie within a few radii of their host body, because at these distances gravitational accelerations inhibit satellite formation. The best known exceptions are Jupiter's gossamer rings and Saturn's E ring, broad sheets of dust that extend outward until they fade from view at five to ten planetary radii. Source satellites continuously supply the dust, which is subsequently lost in collisions or by radial transport. Here we report that Saturn has an enormous ring associated with its outer moon Phoebe, extending from at least 128R(S) to 207R(S) (Saturn's radius R(S) is 60,330 km). The ring's vertical thickness of 40R(S) matches the range of vertical motion of Phoebe along its orbit. Dynamical considerations argue that these ring particles span the Saturnian system from the main rings to the edges of interplanetary space. The ring's normal optical depth of approximately 2 x 10(-8) is comparable to that of Jupiter's faintest gossamer ring, although its particle number density is several hundred times smaller. Repeated impacts on Phoebe, from both interplanetary and circumplanetary particle populations, probably keep the ring populated with material. Ring particles smaller than centimetres in size slowly migrate inward and many of them ultimately strike the dark leading face of Iapetus.

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Comment in

  • Solar system: Saturn's colossal ring.
    Tiscareno MS, Hedman MM. Tiscareno MS, et al. Nature. 2009 Oct 22;461(7267):1064-5. doi: 10.1038/4611064a. Nature. 2009. PMID: 19847251 No abstract available.

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