Title: Rings and Natural Satellites
1Rings and Natural Satellites
2Planetary rings
3Saturns rings
- Main structures A and B rings, separated by the
Cassini Division (21 resonance with satellite
Mimas) - The outer part of the A ring hosts the Encke
Division, which is cleared by satellite Pan - The C and D rings are broad, faint structures
interior to the B ring (D ring unobservable from
Earth) - The E ring is very wide and diffuse, fed by
volcanic ejecta from satellite Enceladus - The F and G rings are very narrow the F ring is
shepherded by satellites Prometheus and Pandora
4Co-orbiting satellites
- An object B orbiting very close to another object
A about the same planet in nearly circular orbits
performs a horseshoe orbit due to the mutual
gravitational attraction - Example Saturns co-orbiting satellites Janus
and Epimetheus
5Fine structure of the rings
- All the major ring components exhibit a fine
pattern of radial density variation with rather
high contrast, giving them the appearance of a
gramophone record
Voyager 2 false-color picture of Saturns rings
6Apparent repulsion
- - a small particle B orbiting near a larger
object A experiences a hyperbolic deflection when
passing near A. - - This leads to loss or gain of angular
momentum, causing the orbit of B to be repelled
from A
7Gap clearing shepherding
Satellite Pan orbiting inside the Encke Division
Satellites Prometheus and Pandora orbit on the
inner resp. outer side of the F ring
8Jupiters rings
- Even the Main Ring is very faint
- All rings are strongly forward scattering and
consist of very small particles - The Halo is inside the main ring, and the two
Gossamer rings are outside - All the inner satellites are connected to the
ring structures
9Jupiters main ring in forward scattering
Voyager picture taken in the direction of the Sun
10Jupiters inner moons
- Metis (diam. 40 km) is embedded in the main ring
- Adrastea (diam. 20 km) is at the main rings
outer edge - Amalthea (diam. 190 km) is at the outer periphery
of the inner Gossamer ring - Thebe (diam. 100 km) is near the outer periphery
of the outer Gossamer ring
11Uranus rings inner moons
- The rings were discovered during a stellar
occultation in 1977 - They are dark and narrow, situated mostly rather
close together - The outermost rings are connected with the system
of small, inner satellites
12Uranus rings
- The rings are bright in forward scattering, and
the intermediate regions also prove not to be
void of material - The outer, bright and relatively broad ? ring is
shepherded by satellites Cordelia and Ophelia
13Neptunes rings inner moons
- Data mainly from stellar occultations and Voyager
2 imaging - Main rings LeVerrier and Adams broader features
in between Galle, Arago and Lassell - 5 satellites orbit inside the Adams ring 3
inside the LeVerrier ring
14Neptunes ring arcs
- Stellar occultation measurements indicated
asymmetric ring features - Voyager 2 pictures revealed arcs (clumps of
material) in the Adams ring Fraternité, Egalité,
Liberté
15The Roche limit
- Repulsive, tidal acceleration
- Mutual attraction
- FtFg?
16Rings and Roche limits
- Jupiter the RL is in the Gossamer region
- Saturn the RL is in the A-B ring region
- Uranus the RL is outside the ? ring, in the
region of the outer rings - Neptune the RL is near the Adams ring
- Indication collisional shattering of small,
inner moons and dispersion of material inside the
RL may have caused, and still be causing the rings
17Planetary satellite systems
- The terrestrial planets have few satellites,
while the giant planets have a multitude - In some respects the giant planet satellite
systems resemble the Solar System in miniature,
but each system is highly unique - The giant planet satellites may be arranged in
three broad categories corresponding to an inner,
a central and an outer zone with respect to the
planet
18Giant planet satellites
- The inner satellites are always small and have
equatorial, circular orbits - (regular orbits)
- The central zone contains all the large,
classical satellites, and in the - case of Saturn also some small ones. All except
Neptunes have regular - orbits
- All the outer satellites are irregular (high
inclinations to the equator) and - small nearly all are recent discoveries
19Origin of the satellites
- The inner, small satellites orbit within or near
the Roche Limit and ring system. They appear to
be eroded remnants of tidal disruption or
collisional fragmentation - The central, regular satellites were formed by
solid accretion in a circumplanetary gas/dust
disk that may have been the result of gas capture
from the solar nebula - The outer, irregular satellites have orbits that
are perturbed by the Sun more than by the
equatorial flattening of the planet they were
captured when the planets were still young
20Collisional captures
- Triton
- Somewhat smaller than Europa but larger than
Pluto - Comparable to other large satellites with respect
to distance from the planet - Orbit is circular but retrograde!
- Collisional capture also expelled Nereid into its
highly elliptic orbit, and ejected other original
satellites - Irregular satellites may also be collisionally
captured but their parents were smaller and may
have been fragmented
21Jupiters Galilean satellites
- Discovered by Galileo in 1610
- Europa is slightly smaller than the Moon
Callisto and Ganymede are larger than Mercury - Io has a rocky composition Europa is mostly
rocky Ganymede and Callisto are 50 rock and 50
ice - Tidal heating effects are important for Io and
Europa
22Tidal heating of satellites
- The tidal force from the planet raises bulges on
the planet-facing and planet-opposing sides of
the satellite - The orbits of Io and Europa around Jupiter are
eccentric due to mutual gravitational forces of
the 421 resonance Io-Europa-Ganymede triplet - The orbital eccentricity causes flexing of the
satellite due to (1) varying distance from
Jupiter (2) varying angular velocity while the
rotational velocity is constant
This picture illustrates the tidal lag of a
planet that rotates faster than the orbital
motion of the satellite
23Ios volcanism (1)
- Ios tidal heating causes a constant volcanism
- heat flux is 40 times greater than for Earth
- tidal heat is too large to be removed by
conduction or solid-state convection - melting of the subsurface and volcanic eruptions
- over 200 volcanic calderas, generally over 20 km
in size - volcanic flows hundreds of km long indicate low
viscosity similar to terrestrial basalt lavas - resurfacing rate estimated to 1-10 cm/year
- all geologic features related to volcanism no
impact craters
24Ios volcanism (2)
- Ios surface is dominated by S-bearing species
light SO2 frosts, elemental S and coloured S
compounds - Two classes of volcanic plumes are concentrated
in the equatorial region Prometheus-type and
Pele-type - Pele-type plumes are higher and bigger,
short-lived with darker deposits, higher
temperatures - Prometheus-type eruptions are probably driven by
vaporization of SO2 in contact with molten S - Pele-type eruptions may be driven by liquid S
heated by molten silicates at several km depth
phase change to gaseous S drives the volcano - Some very small hot spots are extremely hot
(gt1700 K) and probably correspond to ultramafic,
highly fluid magmas
25Europa (1)
- Slightly smaller than the Moon, mostly rocky
composition, tidally heated - H2O crust 100 km thick the lower part is
certainly liquid - Weak magnetic field, induced by a conducting
liquid (salty water?) moving in Jupiters
magnetic field - Very bright surface spectral features of nearly
pure water ice - Extremely flat, topography lt 300 m few
impact craters indicate young surface (10-100 Myr)
26Europa (2)
- Global network of dark ridges, up to gt 1500 km
long - Appears to have broken up the ice into plates
30 km in size lateral movements have occurred - Some evidence of geyser- or volcanic-like
activity along ridges active resurfacing?
27Ganymedes tectonic features
Old, cratered icy surface Regionally
extensive, bright and dark areas like on the
Moon But, unlike the Moon, the dark areas are
oldest, most heavily cratered Very complex
geology with tectonic features in the younger
terrain Parallel ridges and grooves up to 10 km
wide, 100 m high Ridges are probably
tensional grabens
28Titan
- Visual appearance from a distance orange,
featureless - Dense atmosphere ps1.5 bar, N2 and minor CH4
- Optically opaque, dense upper layer of
photochemical smog hydrocarbons, nitriles - Aerosols precipitate out of the gas as 0.2-1 ?m
particles, accumulate into larger aggregates and
fall to the surface
29Titans atmosphere
- Surface temperature 90 K very small greenhouse
effect - N2 and CH4 condense into clouds at 20-30 km
height precipitation may occur - Detached haze layer at 300 km height main haze
is at lt 100 km height
30Titans photochemistry
- Solar uv and particle radiation dissociate N2
molecules at gt1000 km height - N atoms react with methane, producing H (escaping
into space), HCN, hydrocarbons and C-N compounds - These react further, producing stable species
that sink into lower layers, eventually
precipitating onto the surface - This is a sink of methane (minor atmospheric
constituent), which needs to be resupplied from
the surface of Titan
31Results from Huygens landing on Titan
- Geologically young surface
- evidence of flow around islands
- deposits and rocks of water ice
- drainage channels which may have been created by
methane springs - few craters
- dark, extensive, possibly flooded lowlands
- Landing occurred in liquid-saturated mud
- A liquid methane-rich hydrocarbon ocean is not
currently extensive at the surface - Possible cryovolcanism releases methane into the
atmosphere
32Miranda
- Very complex despite its small size
- some areas very old and heavily cratered
- other regions endogenic and crater poor,
consisting of white and dark bands and highly
fractured scarps and ridges - models of origin include
- tidal heating due to Uranus vicinity
- incomplete differentiation and convection
patterns - disruption by impact followed by reaccretion
- localized late accretion of heavy core material
33Triton
- Somewhat smaller than the Moon, extremely cold
- Tenuous atmosphere of N2 with trace CH4
- Very bright surface made of N2 and CH4 ice with
trace NH3 - Trailing-leading hemispheric dichotomy
- Cryo-volcanoes of liquid N2 in polar regions with
constant insolation carry particles into the
atmosphere
34Irregular satellites (1)
- Orbits are contained within the Hill radius
- Moderate to high eccentricities
- Separation into prograde and retrograde classes
- Groupings are evident mostly for jovian satellites
35Irregular satellites (2)
- Similar colours tend to be observed for members
of the same dynamical group - This supports an origin by collisional
fragmentation - Collisions are part of some capture models, where
a temporary capture is made permanent by
dissipative forces - - Increase of the planetary mass by accretion
- - Gas drag through a planetary envelope or
circumplanetary disk - - Collision or close encounter with another
satellite - - Dynamical friction from a huge number of small
objects orbiting in the vicinity
36Phoebe
- The largest irregular satellite (220 km
diameter) - Imaged by the Cassini probe orbiting Saturn
intensively cratered - Spectra show abundant water ice, hydrous
minerals, CO2, organics, nitriles, cyanide
compounds - Composition similar to comets density of 1.6
g/cm3 indicates compact object like Pluto and
Charon