Cassini Probe Sees Electric Link With Saturn And One Of Its Moons

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April 20, 2011

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

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

RELEASE: 11-115

CASSINI PROBE SEES ELECTRIC LINK WITH SATURN AND ONE OF ITS MOONS

PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA is releasing the first images and sounds of 
an electrical connection between Saturn and one of its moons. The 
data collected by the agency's Cassini spacecraft enable scientists 
to improve their understanding of the complex web of interaction 
between the planet and its numerous moons. The results of the data 
analysis are published in the journals Nature and Geophysical 
Research Letters. 

Scientists previously theorized an electrical circuit should exist at 
Saturn. After analyzing data that Cassini collected in 2008, 
scientists saw a glowing patch of ultraviolet light emissions near 
Saturn's north pole that marked the presence of a circuit, even 
though the moon is 150,000 miles (240,000 kilometers) away from the 
planet. 

The patch occurs at the end of a magnetic field line connecting Saturn 
and its moon Enceladus. The area, known as an auroral footprint, is 
the spot where energetic electrons dive into the planet's atmosphere, 
following magnetic field lines that arc between the planet's north 
and south polar regions. 

"The footprint discovery at Saturn is one of the most important fields 
and particle revelations from Cassini and ultimately may help us 
understand Saturn's strange magnetic field," said Marcia Burton, a 
Cassini fields and particles scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "It gives us the first visual 
connection between Saturn and one of its moons." 

The auroral footprint measures approximately 750 miles (1,200 
kilometers) by less than 250 miles (400 kilometers), covering an area 
comparable to California or Sweden. At its brightest, the footprint 
shone with an ultraviolet light intensity far less than Saturn's 
polar auroral rings, but comparable to the faintest aurora visible at 
Earth without a telescope in the visible light spectrum. Scientists 
have not found a matching footprint at the southern end of the 
magnetic field line. 

"Cassini fields and particles instruments found particle beams aligned 
with Saturn's magnetic field near Enceladus, and scientists started 
asking if we could see an expected ultraviolet spot at the end of the 
magnetic field line on Saturn," said Wayne Pryor, a lead author of 
the Nature study released today, and Cassini co-investigator at 
Central Arizona College in Coolidge, Ariz. "We were delighted to find 
the glow close to the 'bulls-eye' at the center of our target." 

Jupiter's active moon Io creates glowing footprints near Jupiter's 
north and south poles, so scientists suspected there was an analogous 
electrical connection between Saturn and Enceladus. It is the only 
known active moon in the Saturn system with jets spraying water vapor 
and organic particles into space. For years, scientists used space 
telescopes to search Saturn's poles for footprints, but none were 
found. 

In 2008, Cassini detected a beam of energetic protons near Enceladus 
aligned with the magnetic field and field-aligned electron beams. A 
team of scientists analyzed the data and concluded the electron beams 
had sufficient energy flux to generate a detectable level of auroral 
emission at Saturn. A few weeks later, Cassini captured images of an 
auroral footprint in Saturn's northern hemisphere. In 2009, a group 
of Cassini scientists led by Donald Gurnett at the University of Iowa 
in Iowa City detected more complementary signals near Enceladus 
consistent with currents that travel from the moon to the top of 
Saturn's atmosphere, including a hiss-like sound from the magnetic 
connection. That paper was published in March in Geophysical Research 
Letters. 

The water cloud above the Enceladus jets produces a massive, ionized 
"plasma" cloud through its interactions with the magnetic bubble 
around Saturn. This cloud disturbs the magnetic field lines. The 
footprint appears to flicker in these new data, so the rate at which 
Enceladus is spewing particles may vary. 

"The new data are adding fuel to the fire of some long-standing 
debates about this active little moon," said Abigail Rymer, the other 
lead author of the Nature study and a Cassini team scientist based at 
the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, 
Md. "Scientists have been wondering whether the venting rate is 
variable, and these new data suggest that it is." 

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the 
European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. JPL manages the 
mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. 

To see a video and hear the sounds of the electrical connection, 
visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/cassini 

	
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