NASA Spacecraft Reveal Mysteries Of Jupiter And Saturn Rings

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March 31, 2011

Dwayne C. Brown 
Headquarters, Washington                               
202-358-1726 
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx 

Jia-Rui Cook 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 
818-354-0850 
jccook@xxxxxxxxxxxx 



RELEASE: 11-095

NASA SPACECRAFT REVEAL MYSTERIES OF JUPITER AND SATURN RINGS

PASADENA, Calif. -- In a celestial forensic exercise, scientists 
analyzing data from NASA's Cassini, Galileo and New Horizons missions 
have traced telltale ripples in Saturn and Jupiter's rings to 
specific collisions with cometary fragments that occurred decades, 
not millions of years, ago. 

Jupiter's ripple-producing culprit was comet Shoemaker-Levy 9. The 
comet's debris cloud hurtled through the thin Jupiter ring system on 
a collision course into the planet in July 1994. Scientists attribute 
Saturn's ripples to a similar object - likely another cloud of comet 
debris - plunging through the inner rings in 1983. The findings are 
detailed in two papers published Thursday in the journal Science. 

"We're finding evidence that a planet's rings can be affected by 
specific, traceable events that happened in the last 30 years, rather 
than a hundred million years ago," said Matthew Hedman, a Cassini 
imaging team associate, lead author on one of the papers, and a 
research associate at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. "The solar 
system is a much more dynamic place than we gave it credit for." 

Scientists learned about the patchy patterns in Jupiter's rings in the 
late 1990s from Galileo's visit to Jupiter. Unfortunately, the images 
from that mission were fuzzy, and scientists didn't understand why 
such patterns would occur. Not until Cassini entered orbit around 
Saturn in 2004 and started sending back thousands of images did 
scientists have a better picture of the activity. A 2007 science 
paper by Hedman and colleagues first noted corrugations in Saturn's 
innermost ring, dubbed the D ring. 

A group including Hedman and Mark Showalter, a Cassini co-investigator 
based at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, Calif., saw that the 
grooves in the D ring appeared to wind together more tightly over 
time. Playing the process backward, Hedman demonstrated the pattern 
originated when something tilted the D ring off its axis by about 300 
feet (100 meters) in late 1983. The scientists found Saturn's gravity 
on the tilted area warped the ring into a tightening spiral. 

Cassini imaging scientists received another clue around August 2009 
when the sun shone directly along Saturn's equator and lit the rings 
edge-on. The unique lighting conditions highlighted ripples not 
previously seen in another part of the ring system. Whatever happened 
in 1983 was big - not a small, localized event. 

The collision tilted a region more than 12,000 miles (19,000 
kilometers) wide, covering part of the D ring and the next outermost 
ring, called the C ring. Unfortunately, spacecraft were not visiting 
Saturn at that time, and the planet was on the far side of the sun 
out of sight from ground or space-based telescopes. 

Hedman and Showalter, the lead author on the second paper, wondered 
whether the long-forgotten pattern in Jupiter's ring system might 
illuminate the mystery. Using Galileo images from 1996 and 2000, 
Showalter confirmed a similar winding spiral pattern by applying the 
same math they had applied to Saturn and factoring in Jupiter's 
gravitational influence. Galileo was launched on a space shuttle in 
1989 and studied Jupiter until 2003. 

Unwinding the spiral pinpointed the date when Jupiter's ring was 
tilted off its axis between June and September 1994. Shoemaker-Levy 
plunged into the Jovian atmosphere in late July. The Galileo images 
also revealed a second spiral, which was calculated to have 
originated in 1990. Images taken by New Horizons in 2007, when the 
spacecraft flew by Jupiter on its way to Pluto, showed two newer 
ripple patterns, in addition to the fading echo of the Shoemaker-Levy 
impact. 

"We now know that collisions into the rings are very common - a few 
times per decade for Jupiter and a few times per century for Saturn," 
Showalter said. "Now scientists know that the rings record these 
impacts like grooves in a vinyl record, and we can play back their 
history later." 

Launched in Oct. 15, 1997, Cassini began orbiting Saturn in 2004 and 
sends back data daily. 

"Finding these fingerprints still in the rings is amazing and helps us 
better understand impact processes in our solar system," said Linda 
Spilker, Cassini project scientist, based at NASA's Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "Cassini's long sojourn around Saturn 
has helped us tease out subtle clues that tell us about the history 
of our origins." 

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the 
European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The mission is 
managed by JPL for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. 
The imaging team is based at the Space Science Institute in Boulder, 
Colo. For more information about Cassini, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/cassini 

Pluto New Horizons launched in 2006 on the first mission to study 
Pluto and the Kuiper Belt. The mission is managed by the Johns 
Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md., for NASA. The 
mission is part of the New Frontiers program managed at the agency's 
Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. For more information 
about Pluto New Horizons, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/newhorizons 

	
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