Estimating the masses of Saturn's A and B rings from high-optical depth N-body simulations and stellar occultations

被引:43
|
作者
Robbins, Stuart J. [1 ]
Stewart, Glen R. [1 ]
Lewis, Mark C. [2 ]
Colwell, Joshua E. [3 ]
Sremcevic, Miodrag [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Colorado, Atmospher & Space Phys Lab, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
[2] Trinity Univ, Dept Comp Sci, San Antonio, TX 78212 USA
[3] Univ Cent Florida, Dept Phys, Orlando, FL 32816 USA
关键词
Saturn; Rings; Occultations; AZIMUTHAL ASYMMETRY; RADIAL STRUCTURE; PLANETARY RINGS; DENSITY WAVES; WAKES; STABILITY; EVOLUTION; PARTICLE; DISK;
D O I
10.1016/j.icarus.2009.09.012
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
We have completed a series of local N-body simulations of Saturn's B and A rings in order to identify systematic differences in the degree of particle clumping into self-gravity wakes as a function of orbital distance from Saturn and dynamical optical depth (a function of surface density). These simulations revealed that the normal optical depth of the final configuration can be substantially lower than one would infer from a uniform distribution of particles. Adding more particles to the simulation simply piles more particles onto the self-gravity wakes while leaving relatively clear gaps between the wakes. Estimating the mass from the observed optical depth is therefore a non-linear problem. These simulations may explain why the Cassini UVIS instrument has detected starlight at low incidence angles through regions of the B ring that have average normal optical depths substantially greater than unity at some observation geometries [Colwell, J.E., Esposito, LW., Sremevic, M., Stewart, CR., McClintock, WE., 2007. Icarus 190, 127-144]. We provide a plausible internal density of the particles in the A and B rings based upon fitting the results of our simulations with Cassini UVIS stellar occultation data. We simulated Cassini-like occultations through our simulation cells, calculated optical depths, and attempted to extrapolate to the values that Cassini observes. We needed to extrapolate because even initial optical depths of >4 (sigma >240 g cm(-2)) only yielded final optical depths no greater than 2.8, smaller than the largest measured B ring optical depths. This extrapolation introduces a significant amount of uncertainty, and we chose to be conservative in our overall mass estimates. From our simulations, we infer the surface density of the A ring to be sigma = 42-54 g cm(-2), which corresponds to a mass of 0.5 x 10(9) kg-0.7 x 10(19) kg. We infer a minimum surface density of a = 240-480 g cm(-2) for Saturn's B ring, which corresponds to a minimum mass estimate of 4 x 10(19) kg(-7) x 10(19) kg. The A ring mass estimate agrees well with previous analyses, while the B ring is at least 40% larger. In sum, our lower limit estimate is that the total mass of Saturn's ring system is 120-200% the mass of the moon Mimas, but significantly larger values would be plausible given the limitations of our simulations. A significantly larger mass for Saturn's rings favors a primordial origin for the rings because the disruption of a former satellite of the required mass would be unlikely after the decay of the late heavy bombardment of planetary surfaces. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:431 / 445
页数:15
相关论文
共 26 条
  • [1] Exploring local N-body simulations of Saturn's rings
    Griv, E
    Gedalin, M
    PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE, 2005, 53 (05) : 461 - 472
  • [2] The smallest structures in Saturn's rings from UVIS stellar occultations
    Jerousek, Richard G.
    Colwell, Joshua E.
    Esposito, Larry W.
    Tiscareno, Matthew S.
    Lewis, Mark C.
    Pohl, Leos
    Benavides, Diego A.
    ICARUS, 2024, 415
  • [3] Large-scale N-body simulations of the viscous overstability in Saturn's rings
    Rein, Hanno
    Latter, Henrik N.
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2013, 431 (01) : 145 - 158
  • [4] AN N-BODY INTEGRATOR FOR GRAVITATING PLANETARY RINGS, AND THE OUTER EDGE OF SATURN'S B RING
    Hahn, Joseph M.
    Spitale, Joseph N.
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2013, 772 (02):
  • [5] Stellar streams in the solar neighbourhood from high resolution N-body simulations
    Fux, R
    XVTH IAP MEETING DYNAMICS OF GALAXIES: FROM THE EARLY UNIVERSE TO THE PRESENT, 2000, 197 : 27 - 30
  • [6] Estimating the optical depth of Saturn's main rings using the Cassini Langmuir Probe
    Xystouris, Georgios
    Arridge, Christopher S.
    Morooka, Michiko M.
    Wahlund, Jan-Erik
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2023, 526 (04) : 5839 - 5860
  • [7] Small particles and self-gravity wakes in Saturn's rings from UVIS and VIMS stellar occultations
    Jerousek, Richard G.
    Colwell, Joshua E.
    Esposito, Larry W.
    Nicholson, Philip D.
    Hedman, Matthew M.
    ICARUS, 2016, 279 : 36 - 50
  • [8] Particle sizes in Saturn's rings from UVIS stellar occultations 1. Variations with ring region
    Colwell, J. E.
    Esposito, L. W.
    Cooney, J. H.
    ICARUS, 2018, 300 : 150 - 166
  • [9] Cluster CMDs from N-body simulations: Stellar and binary evolution on GRAPE
    Hurley, JR
    ASTROPHYSICAL SUPERCOMPUTING USING PARTICLE SIMULATIONS, 2003, (208): : 113 - 122
  • [10] Global N-body simulation of gap edge structures created by perturbations from a small satellite embedded in Saturn's rings
    Torii, Naoya
    Ida, Shigeru
    Kokubo, Eiichiro
    Michikoshi, Shugo
    ICARUS, 2024, 415