Scientists find rings of Jupiter are shaped in shadow
- 30 Apr 2008"Within our model we can explain all essential structures of the dust ring we observed," said Krüger.
According to Hamilton, the mechanisms identified in this paper effect the rings of any planet in any solar system, but the effects may not be as evident as it is at Jupiter. "The icy particles in Saturn's famous rings are too large and heavy to be significantly shaped by this process, which is why similar anomalies are not seen there," he said. "Our findings on the effects of shadow may also shed some light on aspects of planetary formation because electrically charged dust particles must somehow combine into larger bodies from which planets and moons are ultimately formed."
Jupiter, Galileo and the Mystery of the Rings
Jupiter, the fifth planet from the Sun, has 63 known moons. The dust forming Jupiter's faint rings is produced when bits of space debris smashes into the small inner moons Adrastea, Metis, Amalthea and Thebe (listed closest to farthest). This dust is organized into a main ring, an inner halo, and two fainter and more distant gossamer rings. The rings largely are bounded by the orbits of these four moons, but a faint outward protrusion of dust extending beyond the orbit of Thebe (pronounced The-be) has, until now, mystified scientists.
Italian scientist Galileo Galilei was the first to discover that Jupiter had moons. Galileo first observed the planet's four largest moons in 1610.
On December 7, 1995 NASA's Galileo spacecraft reached Jupiter and began the first of 35 orbits around the planet. Over seven years the spacecraft took some 14, 000 images of Jupiter, its moons and rings. On September 21, 2003 the Galileo spacecraft was put into a controlled dive to end its mission, by plummeting through Jupiter's atmosphere. In addition to its imaging instruments, the spacecraft carried a supersensitive dust detector, which registered thousands of impacts from dust particles on its way through Jupiter's ring system in 2002 and 2003. The Thebe extension was one of the many new discoveries made by the Galileo spacecraft.






Please copy the 5 symbols from this security code image into the box below to submit comment.






