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-   -   7/3/2004: Rings of Saturn (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=6237)

Undertoad 07-03-2004 12:51 PM

7/3/2004: Rings of Saturn
 
http://cellar.org/2004/saturnrings.jpg

Elspode points out the beautiful Saturn rings images sent
back by Cassini. This large IotD is warranted by the fact
that it has almost no color and so compressed down very
nicely, viewable for modem users.

The full story says maybe the rings are a broken-up moon,
and maybe there was a recent collision between the rings and
something with oxygen:
Quote:

One early result intriguing scientists concerns Saturn's Cassini
Division, the large gap between the A and B rings. While Saturn's
rings are almost exclusively composed of water ice, new findings show
the Cassini Division contains relatively more "dirt" than ice. Further,
the particles between the rings seem remarkably similar to the dark
material that scientists saw on Saturn's moon, Phoebe. These dark
particles refuel the theory that the rings might be the remnants of a
moon. The F ring was also found to contain more dirt.

Another instrument on Cassini has detected large quantities of oxygen at
the edge of the rings. Scientists are still trying to understand these results,
but they think the oxygen may be left over from a collision that occurred as
recently as January of this year.

"In just two days, our ideas about the rings have been expanded
tremendously," said Dr. Linda Spilker, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif., deputy project scientist for the Cassini-Huygens
mission. "The Phoebe-like material is a big surprise. What puzzles us
is that the A and B rings are so clean and the Cassini Division between
them appears so dirty."

xoxoxoBruce 07-03-2004 02:12 PM

Quote:

rings are almost exclusively composed of water ice
Seems to me, that would be the likely source of the oxygen they detected at the edge.;)

lookout123 07-03-2004 04:13 PM

saturn, schmaturn - that's my mother's dinner plate magnified.

Elspode 07-03-2004 05:41 PM

Rather looks like the Warner Brothers shield to me...

xoxoxoBruce 07-03-2004 09:56 PM

Your going to have to explain that one to me, Els?????

Nothing But Net 07-03-2004 10:06 PM

I'm particularly unimpressed.

Stuff from the Hubble puts this to shame.

xoxoxoBruce 07-03-2004 10:57 PM

But the Hubble (genuflect) doesn't give us that little bitty detail or oxygen readings and wind details.;)

Nothing But Net 07-03-2004 11:44 PM

Cool pic ... <b>bruce</b>!!!

How would you like to surf the wave on Saturn's ring?

wolf 07-04-2004 01:51 AM

I remember many years ago sitting in an auditorium at my college waiting as the live pics were coming in from V-ger ... amazing stuff. This brought back the moment.

Thanks.

Beestie 07-04-2004 02:00 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by wolf I remember many years ago sitting in an auditorium at my college waiting as the live pics were coming in from V-ger ... amazing stuff. This brought back the moment.

Thanks.

Very cool. I heard something interesting about Voyager the other day. Apparently, at its present speed (it recently sped past the outer orbit of Pluto) it will not be completely free of the Sun's gravity for.....

take a wild guess

....

forty-four thousand years. Whoa. The furthest reach of the Sun's gravity is one definition of the edge of the Solar System (Pluto's orbit being another).

wolf 07-04-2004 02:16 AM

It better hurry up and fall in that wormhole soon, then ...

Elspode 07-04-2004 10:24 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Ah...I'm a moron. I referenced incorrectly:

Nothing But Net 07-04-2004 01:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Beestie
The furthest reach of the Sun's gravity is one definition of the edge of the Solar System (Pluto's orbit being another).

Or Sedna?

YellowBolt 07-05-2004 05:31 PM

Sedna is overrated.

I want to see nice and sexy COLOR pictures soon.

Yellow #5 07-06-2004 09:36 AM

That is a seriously dusty CD, and there is a pretty nasty pit and a scratch in track 7.


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