Flamsteed
Astronomy Society |
Saturn’s rings and the Cassini Mission — November 2, 2004 |
Carl D. Murray — Professor of Mathematics &
Astronomy, Queen Mary, University of London |
Carl Murray talked to us about
Saturn’s rings. He has been a member
of the Cassini Imaging Team since 1990 and with the mission well underway and
producing breathtaking new pictures and data daily, Carl delighted us with
his clarity and enthusiasm, and shared some of the excitement of the mission
team. He began with a short survey of
the
development
of knowledge of Saturn’s rings. Galileo was
the first to observe them through his brand-new telescope in 1610. The poor optics gave him a very shaky view
and at first he thought Saturn was a triple planet. The effect gradually disappeared though (in
fact because Saturn’s orientation to Earth was changing and, unknown to
Galileo, his view of the rings shifted to side-on where they are not easily
visible at all).
Christiaan Huygens was the first to identify the
ring system correctly for what it was.
His 1659 book
Systema Saturnium (The Saturn System) remains
still one of the clearest expositions, and Huygens also discovered Saturn’s
moon Titan, now one of the prime targets of the Cassini Mission. Working in Paris at the same time as
Huygens, the Director of the Paris Observatory
Giovanni Cassini discovered four more moons and
in 1676 observed the gap in the rings later called the Cassini Division. |
One of Huygen’s drawings from The Saturn System 1659. His
diagram of the changing views of the rings remains one of the clearest ever. |
Eventually in 1856
James Clerk Maxwell showed that the rings couldn’t
be solid but must be composed of ‘an indefinite number of unconnected
particles’. Maxwell is also known
(among one or two other small things like the theory of electromagnetic
waves) for his ground-breaking work on dropping cats to see how fast they
could turn to land on their feet. Our
knowledge of the rings exploded with the successful probe missions, Pioneer
11 in 1979 and the Voyagers in 1980/1.
It was the Voyager pictures that caught Carl’s imagination and started
his investigation of the newly-discovered
F-ring. |
The Voyager pictures revealed
the fascinating complexity of the ring system. Carl explained that our
knowledge of the rings has now built prodigiously. We can explain all the
features of the A-ring. The culprits
are Saturn’s moons which disturb the ring particles by their gravitational
pull and ‘resonance’ effects—the time relationship between a moon’s orbit and
the ring feature. But the B-ring
remains to be explained and many of the features continue to intrigue: why
are some rings broad (A-D), some narrow (F,G), and some diffuse (E)? What causes the radial features or
‘spokes’? Why are there gaps in the
rings, and rings in the gaps? And what
explains the lifetime of the ring system?
Why is it still there when the particles should be drifting in toward
the planet, and the small moons drifting out? There are high hopes that the
Cassini-Huygens Mission will provide some answers. |
Eyeing the culprit.
Mimas causes the ring gap in the foreground (NASA/JPL/SSI) |
The Cassini/Huygens Spacecraft (NASA/JPL/SSI) |
The discovery of S/2004 S3
August 2004 (NASA/JPL/SSI) |
Thousands of people in both
Europe and the US have contributed to the
Cassini-Huygens mission.
Planning started in 1989 and UK scientists were very successful in winning
key roles — 6 of 12 instruments on Cassini and 2 of 6 on Huygens are UK
developments. The probe was launched
in October 1997 and arrived at Saturn in July 2004 after ‘gravity assist’
fly-bys of Venus (2), the Earth, and Jupiter. Carl has had a high-profile
role in the mission’s Imaging Team — at least in the UK media: challenged by
John Humphries on Radio 4 one morning at 7:45am, Carl had to explain ‘what is
the point of all this?’ He gently
pointed-out that in the Saturn ring system we have a planet-forming solar
system in miniature. If we can’t
understand this on our doorstep, how are we to explain systems we’re
beginning to detect thousands of parsecs distant? His finest hour (at least to date!) came
in August 2004 when he spotted
a new moon ‘S/2004 S3’
in the
images
(left) on the edge of the F-ring. His excitement came partly from the fact
that the last discovery in the UK of a solar system moon was of Jupiter JVIII
in 1906 by Philip Melotte at Greenwich — just a hop, skip & jump from
Carl’s desk in the Mile End Road! We have another 4 years (maybe
6 years!) of the mission to look forward to.
The Huygens probe is planned to detach on Christmas Day and land on
Titan in mid-January. The Cassini
Orbital Tour will provide 46 more fly-bys of Titan and a view of the rings
from 70 degrees above the equatorial plane. Watch this space! (No pun intended, he lied) Mike Dryland |