Gigantic moons prevent giant icy ring formations
From: University of California Riverside
July 21, 2022 -- Because
it's bigger, Jupiter ought to have larger, more spectacular rings than Saturn
has. But new UC Riverside research shows Jupiter's massive moons prevent that
vision from lighting up the night sky.
t is so much closer
than Saturn." Kane also had questions about whether Jupiter once had
fantastic rings and lost them. It is possible for ring structures to be
temporary.
To understand the
reason Jupiter currently looks the way it does, Kane and his graduate student
Zhexing Li ran a dynamic computer simulation accounting for the orbits of
Jupiter's four main moons, as well as the orbit of the planet itself, and
information about the time it takes for rings to form. Their results are now
online, soon to be published in the Planetary Science journal.
Saturn's rings are
largely made of ice, some of which may have come from comets, which are also
largely made of ice. If moons are massive enough, their gravity can toss the
ice out of a planet's orbit, or change the orbit of the ice enough so that it
collides with the moons.
"We found that the
Galilean moons of Jupiter, one of which is the largest moon in our solar
system, would very quickly destroy any large rings that might form," Kane
said. As a result, it is unlikely that Jupiter had large rings at any point in
its past.
"Massive planets
form massive moons, which prevents them from having substantial rings,"
Kane said.
All four giant planets
in our solar system -- Saturn, Neptune, Uranus and also Jupiter -- do in fact
have rings. However, both Neptune and Jupiter's rings are so flimsy they're
difficult to view with traditional stargazing instruments.
Coincidentally, some of
the recent images from the newly commissioned James Webb Space Telescope
included pictures of Jupiter, in which the faint rings are visible.
"We didn't know
these ephemeral rings existed until the Voyager spacecraft went past because we
couldn't see them," Kane said.
Uranus has rings that
are aren't as large but are more substantial than Saturn's. Going forward, Kane
intends to run simulations of the conditions on Uranus to see what the lifetime
of that planet's rings might be.
Some astronomers
believe Uranus is tipped over on its side as the result of a collision the
planet had with another celestial body. Its rings could be the remains of that
impact.
Beyond their beauty,
rings help astronomers understand the history of a planet, because they offer
evidence of collisions with moons or comets that may have happened in the past.
The shape and size of the rings, as well as the composition of the material, offers
an indication about the type of event that formed them.
"For us
astronomers, they are the blood spatter on the walls of a crime scene. When we
look at the rings of giant planets, it's evidence something catastrophic
happened to put that material there," Kane said.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/07/220721101508.htm
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