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Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Jan 17, 2016

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Page 1: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)
Page 2: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Jupiter (Galileo) Saturn (Cassini)

Uranus (Hubble) Neptune (Voyager)

Page 3: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Everything You Need to Knowabout Ring Dynamics

• Newton: Force = Mass x Acceleration

• Law of Gravity

• Collisions

• Light-scattering Physics

Page 4: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)
Page 5: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Main ring

Dark side = High “phase angle”: emphasizes tiny dust grains

Page 6: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

“Halo”

“Gossamer ring” discovery

Page 7: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Two “Gossamer” rings

Dusty rings must be sustained by source bodies(seen or unseen)

Page 8: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)
Page 9: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

A B C

Encke Gap Cassini Division

D F

Lit side = Low “phase angle”: emphasizes large bodies

Page 10: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

EG

Enceladus

Earth!

Unique high-phase view!F

Page 11: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

“Geysers” on Enceladus= the source of the E ring

Page 12: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Cassini On-line Resources

• Cassini Main Site– http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/

• The latest raw images (cool!)– http://

saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/raw/index.cfm

• Imaging Team Web Site– http://ciclops.org/

Page 13: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

The “Opposition Surge”on Saturn’s rings.

This appears exactlyopposite to the directionto the Sun, at phaseangle 0°.

The size of the surge isa measure of how rough the particles are.

Page 14: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)
Page 15: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

gammaeta

lambda

epsilon

beta

alpha

6, 5, 4

delta

The main rings of UranusImaged by Voyager 2

Low phase = big particles

Page 16: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

The rings of Uranus at high phase > dust belts!

Page 17: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)
Page 18: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Uranus in HST

Page 19: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Long exposures reveal rings

Page 20: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Overlaying frames shows moons

Page 21: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Processing shows new rings!

Mab & the mu ring

nu ring

Page 22: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)
Page 23: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Liberté

FraternitéEgalité

Courage

Leverrierring

Adamsring

Page 24: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)
Page 25: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Neptune’s Changing Arcs

• The arcs can now be detected by Hubble and ground-based telescopes.

• Since 1989, the leading arcs have advanced forward and faded.• Gravity effects of the nearby moon Galatea help to confine the

arcs– …but the model is in trouble!

Page 26: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Fun with Rings (1)

Vertical Ripples

Page 27: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)
Page 28: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

D ring ripples that have been winding up since 1984!

Page 29: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Fun with Rings (2)

Satellite “Wakes”

Page 30: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Wavy edge of EnckeGap suggests anembedded moon.

Colorenhancementreveals “spiral” structure.

Perturbedcentralringlet

Page 31: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

The discoveryof Pan

in a sequenceof five

Voyager images

Page 32: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

A spectacularview of

the Pan wakefrom Cassini

direction to Pan

Page 33: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Pan Imaged at Fine Resolution by Cassini

Page 34: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

The Discovery of Daphnis in the Keeler Gap:The wake is highly distorted

Page 35: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Fun with Rings (3)

Saturn’s Pathological F Ring

Page 36: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Ophelia

Cordelia

Two moons “shepherd” theepsilon ring of Uranus

Page 37: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Pandora

Prometheus

Distant Voyager approach image:Is the F ring shepherded too?

Page 38: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)
Page 39: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

A Selection of Cassini Images

Page 40: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Prometheus produces a “wake” pattern just like Pan

Page 41: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

The aftermath of a ring impact?

Page 42: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

A recent, new feature 200 km inward from the central ring

Page 43: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

2007: A Good Yearahead for Ring Science…

Page 44: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Cassini Extended MissionJuly 2008–June 2010

Sample TourScience planning is proceeding.Note that this period includes the equinox on August 11, 2009!

Page 45: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

New Horizons at JupiterFebruary 28, 2007

Page 46: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

The first images ofJupiter from New Horizons

Range is 1 AU

Page 47: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)

Sample planned imagesduring the

New Horizons flyby

Page 48: Jupiter (Galileo)Saturn (Cassini) Uranus (Hubble)Neptune (Voyager)