Office of News Services
University of Colorado-Boulder
Boulder, Colorado

Contact:
Larry Esposito, (303) 492-5990, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Joshua Colwell, (303) 492-6805
Jim Scott, (303) 492-3114

Dec. 8, 2003

Rings Around The Planets: Recycling Of Material May Extend Ring Lifetimes

Although rings around planets like Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune are 
relatively short-lived, new evidence implies that the recycling of orbiting 
debris can lengthen the lifetime of such rings, according to University of 
Colorado researchers.

Strong evidence now implies small moons near the giant planets like Saturn and 
Jupiter are essentially piles of rubble, said Larry Esposito, a professor at 
CU-Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics. These re-constituted 
small bodies are the source of material for planetary rings.

Previous calculations by Esposito and LASP Research Associate Joshua Colwell 
showed the short lifetimes for such moons imply that the solar system is nearly 
at the end of the age of rings. "These philosophically unappealing results may 
not truly describe our solar system and the rings that may surround giant 
extra-solar planets," said Esposito. "Our new calculations of models explain how 
inclusion of recycling can lengthen the lifetime of rings and moons."

The observations from the Voyager and Galileo space missions showed a variety of 
rings surrounding each of the giant planets, including Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus 
and Neptune. The rings are mixed in each case with small moons.

"It is clear that the small moons not only sculpt the rings through their 
gravity, but are also the parents of the ring material," said Esposito. "In each 
ring system, destructive processes like grinding, darkening and spreading are 
acting so rapidly that the rings must be much younger than the planets they circle."

Numerical models by Esposito and Colwell from the 1990's showed a "collisional 
cascade," where a planet's moons are broken into smaller moons when struck by 
asteroids or comets. The fragments then are shattered to form the particles in 
new rings. The rings themselves are subsequently ground to dust, which is swept 
away.

But according to Colwell, "Some of the fragments that make up the rings may be 
re-accreted instead of being ground to dust. New evidence shows some debris has 
accumulated into moons or moonlets rather than disappearing through collisional 
erosion."

"This process has proceeded rapidly," said Esposito. "The typical ring is 
younger than a few hundred million years, the blink of an eye compared to the 
planets, which are 4.5 billion years old. The question naturally arises why 
rings still exist, to be photographed in such glory by visiting human spacecraft 
that have arrived lately on the scene," he said.

"The answer now likely seems to be cosmic recycling," said Esposito. Each time a 
moon is destroyed by a cosmic impact, much of the material released is captured 
by other nearby moons. These recycled moons are essentially collections of 
rubble, but by recycling material through a series of small moons, the lifetime 
of the ring system may be longer than we initially thought."

Esposito and former LASP Research Associate Robin Canup, now with the Southwest 
Research Institute's Boulder branch, showed through computer modeling that 
smaller fragments can be recaptured by other moons in the system. "Without this 
recycling, the rings and moons are soon gone," said Esposito.

But with more recycling, the lifetime is longer, Esposito said. With most of the 
material recycled, as now appears to be the case in most rings, the lifetime is 
extended by a large factor.

"Although the individual rings and moons we now see are ephemeral, the 
phenomenon persists for billions of years around Saturn," said Esposito. 
"Previous calculations ignored the collective effects of the other moons in 
extending the persistence of rings by recapturing and recycling ring material."

Esposito, the principal investigator on a $12 million spectrograph on the 
Cassini spacecraft slated to arrive at Saturn in July 2004, will look closely at 
the competing processes of destruction and re-capture in Saturn's F ring to 
confirm and quantify this explanation. Esposito discovered the F Ring using data 
from NASA's Voyager 2 mission to the outer planets launched in 1978.


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