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New observations by a spacecraft suggest Saturn's second-largest moon may be surrounded by rings. If confirmed, it would the first time a ring system has been found around a moon.
The international Cassini spacecraft detected what appeared to be a large debris disk around the 950-mile-wide moon Rhea during a flyby in 2005. Scientists proposed that the halo likely contained particles ranging from the size of grains to boulders.
The finding was described in a study published in the March 7 issue of the journal Science.
Unlike the rings around Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune, the apparent arcs around Rhea remain invisible and have not been directly seen. Scientists inferred their existence based on measurements by Cassini, which detected a drop in electrons on both sides of the moon, suggesting the presence of rings was absorbing the electrons.
It's unclear where the rings would have originated, but one explanation is they may be the result of an ancient asteroid or comet collision that spewed material around Rhea.
JMZawodny
Poquoson, Virginia, United States
ehartwell
Canada
wanderingspace
New York, New York, United States
madmiked
Forest Hills, New York, United States
kokogiak
Natick, Massachusetts, United States
Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (4)
at 18:26 on March 6th, 2008
Check out NASA's latest podcast on this topic: here
at 20:55 on March 6th, 2008
see more at www.wanderingspace.net
wanderingspace has contributed a photo to this story.
at 23:08 on March 6th, 2008
Thanks for the great photos, everyone!
at 05:03 on March 7th, 2008
Rhea is the second largest of Saturn's moons at 1,528 kilometers across. Tiny Janus(181 kilometers across) is visible as a faint speck just below the rings at bottom left, it shadow visible against the blue northern hemisphere at top center. This view looks toward the unilluminated side of the rings from about 3 degrees above the ring plane. Downloaded images of two quadrants taken using red, green and blue spectral filters were composited to create this hemispheric version of the image released as PIA08366. Special thanks to Gordan Ugarkovic for identifying Janus and its shadow. This image is featured on my new 2008 wall calendar, Seasons of Ice and Shadow #3.
ehartwell has contributed a photo to this story.