|
Post by 1dave on Mar 17, 2019 15:10:55 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by 1dave on Mar 17, 2019 15:55:27 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by 1dave on Mar 17, 2019 15:57:39 GMT -5
What Causes Rings?A ring is a collection of vast numbers of particles, each like a tiny moon obeying Kepler’s laws as it follows its own orbit around the planet. Thus, the inner particles revolve faster than those farther out, and the ring as a whole does not rotate as a solid body. In fact, it is better not to think of a ring rotating at all, but rather to consider the revolution (or motion in orbit) of its individual moonlets. If the ring particles were widely spaced, they would move independently, like separate moonlets. However, in the main rings of Saturn and Uranus the particles are close enough to exert mutual gravitational influence, and occasionally even to rub together or bounce off each other in low-speed collisions. Because of these interactions, we see phenomena such as waves that move across the rings—just the way water waves move over the surface of the ocean. There are two basic ideas of how such rings come to be. First is the breakup hypothesis, which suggests that the rings are the remains of a shattered moon. A passing comet or asteroid might have collided with the moon, breaking it into pieces. Tidal forces then pulled the fragments apart, and they dispersed into a disk. The second hypothesis, which takes the reverse perspective, suggests that the rings are made of particles that were unable to come together to form a moon in the first place. In either theory, the gravity of the planet plays an important role. Close to the planet (see Figure 1), tidal forces can tear bodies apart or inhibit loose particles from coming together. We do not know which explanation holds for any given ring, although many scientists have concluded that at least a few of the rings are relatively young and must therefore be the result of breakup.
|
|
|
Post by 1dave on Mar 17, 2019 16:03:45 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by opalpyrexia on Mar 17, 2019 18:24:48 GMT -5
Beautiful and fascinating, but for Saturn there's recent research confirming that the rings will disappear in a blink of a cosmic eye. Ring material is evidently falling onto Saturn at a rate that they'll disappear in less than 100 million years. "NASA Research Reveals Saturn is Losing Its Rings at “Worst-Case-Scenario” Rate" www.nasa.gov/press-release/goddard/2018/ring-rainWe'd better get our viewing and photos done while the looking is good!
|
|