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21 Nov 2009

Saturn's Rings

- 10 Aug 2004
By Dr Tony Phillips   
Page 1 of 3

Four hundred years after they were discovered, Saturn's breathtaking rings remain a mystery.

Galileo Galilei was accustomed to extraordinary discoveries. Using his primitive telescope he had found new worlds orbiting Jupiter, watched planet-sized spots crossing the Sun, and explored craters on the Moon. But when Galileo turned his telescope toward Saturn in 1610, even he was amazed.

The planet looked nothing like others in the solar system. Through 17th century optics, Saturn appeared to be one bright star closely flanked by two dimmer ones - a blurry suggestion of the planet's magnificent rings.

What Galileo did next was nearly as unusual as Saturn itself.

He wanted to tell everyone what he had seen, but he also wanted to keep his work secret while he studied the puzzling planet. So, he published his discovery in code: smais mr milmep oet ale umibunen ugttauir as. Unscrambled, the anagram means "I have observed the highest planet tri-form."

Nowadays anyone with a department store telescope can get a better view of Saturn's rings than Galileo did. Otherwise, matters stand much as they did four hundred years ago. First-time observers of the planet still step back from their telescopes speechless. And scientists are still puzzled.

"After all this time we're still not sure about the origin of Saturn's rings," says Jeff Cuzzi, a planetary scientist at the NASA Ames Research Centre. Astronomers once thought that Saturn's rings formed when Saturn did: 4.8 billion years ago as the Sun and planets coalesced from a swirling cloud of interstellar gas. "But lately," Cuzzi says, "there's a growing awareness that Saturn's rings can't be so old."

image
Credit: Humboldt State University [more]

Saturn's rings might have formed only a few hundred million years ago when dinosaurs and their cousins roamed our planet.

Cuzzi speculates that some hundreds of millions of years ago - a time when the earliest dinosaurs roamed our planet - Saturn had no bright rings. Then, he says, something unlikely happened: "A moon-sized object from the outer solar system might have flown nearby Saturn where tidal forces ripped it apart. Or maybe an asteroid smashed one of Saturn's existing moons." The debris encircled the planet and formed the rings we see today.

 
Have your say
 
It's very good but not what I expected
Posted by: guest - 2008-11-04 - 17:26 GMT

This is so good - I really got that one little question answered.
Posted by: princesscat3 - 2008-05-13 - 14:55 GMT

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