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Cassini Captures Best View Yet
Of Saturn's Ring Currents
12/14/2007
Source: saturndaily.com
(Additional comments below)
Scientists have gotten their best "look"
ever at the invisible ring of energetic ions trapped in Saturn's
giant magnetic field, finding that it is asymmetric and dynamic,
unlike similar rings that appear around Earth.
Using the Magnetospheric Imaging Instrument on NASA's Cassini
spacecraft, a team led by Dr. S. Krimigis of the Johns Hopkins
University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) discovered that Saturn's
ring of energetic ions - called a "ring current" - is a warped disc
that is deflected by the solar wind out of the equatorial plane on
the planet's night side and thickens dramatically on the day side.
The images were obtained by a unique camera that Krimigis says
"visualizes the invisible" and show the plasma and radiation belts
in Saturn's environment.
In the Dec. 13 issue of the journal Nature, Krimigis' team describes
how Saturn's ring current changes over time; it's a dynamic system,
doughnut shaped but sometimes appearing like someone took a bite out
of it. They also found that Saturn's ring current is persistently
asymmetric - unlike Earth's - and it rotates closely in-step with
Saturn itself. Ring currents form when hot ionized gas (known as
plasma) becomes trapped on a planet's magnetic field lines. The main
source of the plasma that forms Saturn's ring current is material
from the gas vented by geysers on the moon Enceladus.
At Earth, ring currents form during large solar wind-driven magnetic
storms, although they fade quickly as the driving solar wind
disturbance recedes into deep space. At Saturn, the Magnetospheric
Imaging Instrument (MIMI) observed that the ring current's intensity
seemed only weakly related to solar activity.
"We might get a more intense reading when a solar wind pressure
spike passes by," says Dr. D. Mitchell, a MIMI co-investigator from
APL. "But the surprise is that Saturn's ring current didn't become
symmetric or dissipate as it does at Earth. It stayed lumpy and
rotated around the planet several times. We don't know exactly why
that happens, but we have seen it exhibit this behavior repeatedly."
The presence of a ring current around Saturn was first suggested in
the early 1980s from magnetic anomalies observed by NASA's Pioneer
11 and Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft. But Saturn's ring current had
never been mapped on a global scale; only small areas were mapped
previously, and not in this detail. MIMI was designed for just this
purpose; developed by an APL-led international team, MIMI has three
distinct sensors, one of which contributed the images for this work.
False-color images accompanying the Nature article were taken by
MIMI's ion and neutral camera and show the intensity of the
energetic neutral atoms emitted from the ring current through a
process called charge exchange. This happens when a trapped
energetic ion steals an electron from a cold gas atom, becomes
neutral and escapes the magnetic field. Scientists are using these
images to create a map of the invisible ring current, which is
roughly five times farther from Saturn than its famous icy rings.
MIMI gathered the images for the Nature paper in March 2007 as
Cassini looped nearly 1.5 million kilometers (920,000 miles) over
Saturn's poles, giving the instrument a bird's eye view of the
magnetic activity swirling around the planet.
The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the
European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Science
Mission Directorate, Washington, D.C. APL's Krimigis is the
principal investigator for MIMI, which was designed and built and is
operated by an Applied Physics Laboratory-led team.
The University of Maryland and the Max Planck Institute for Solar
Physics in Germany contributed two of the three sensors. Part of the
analyses for this work was performed as a collaborative effort with
the Academy of Athens in Greece.
For original article click
here.
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