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SATURN,In astronomy, sixth planet from the sun, and the second largest in the solar system,
orbiting the sun at an average distance of 1,426,725,400 km
(886,526,100 mi). Saturn's most distinctive feature is its ring system,
which was first seen in 1610 by Galileo using one of the first telescopes. He did not understand that the rings were separate from the body of the planet, so he described them as handles ansae).
The Dutch astronomer Christiaan Huygens was the first to describe the
rings correctly. In 1655, desiring further time to verify his
explanation without losing his claim to priority, Huygens wrote a
series of letters in code, which when properly arranged formed a Latin
sentence that read in translation, "It is girdled by a thin flat ring,
nowhere touching, inclined to the ecliptic." The rings are named in
order of their discovery, and from the planet outward they are known as
the D, C, B, A, F, G, and E rings. These rings are now known to
comprise more than 100,000 individual ringlets, each of which circles
the planet.
| BRIEF SURVEY OF SATURN |
| Distance from Sun |
|
| Perihelion (closest) |
1,349,467,000 km (838,520,000 mi) |
| Aphelion |
1,503,983,000 km (934,532,000 mi) |
| Distance from Earth |
|
| Minimum |
1,195,500,000 km (742,849,000 mi) |
| Maximum |
1,658,500,000 km (1,030.500,000 mi) |
| Period of revolution |
29.4 earth years |
| Rotation period (sidereal day) |
10.656 hr |
| Eccentricity of orbit |
0.054 |
| Inclination of orbit |
2.484° |
| Mass (earth = 1) |
95.16 |
| Radius at equator |
60,268 km (37,449 mi) |
| Mean density (earth = 1) |
0.127 |
| Surface gravity (earth = 1) |
0.74 |
| Atmospheric pressure at surface (earth = 1) |
>1000 bars |
| Effective temperature |
-178° C (-288° F) |
| Known natural satellites (as of Feb. 2004) |
31 |
As seen from earth, Saturn appears as a yellowish
object-one of the brightest in the night sky. Observed through a
telescope, the A and B rings are easily visible, whereas only under
optimal conditions can the D and E rings be seen. In the haze of
Saturn's gaseous envelope, pale belts and zones parallel to the equator
can be distinguished.
Three U.S. spacecraft have enormously increased knowledge of the Saturnian system. The Pioneer 11 probe flew by in September 1979, followed by Voyager 1 in November 1980 and Voyager 2
in August 1981. These spacecraft carried cameras and instruments for
analyzing the intensities and polarizations of radiation in the
visible, ultraviolet, infrared, and radio portions of the
electromagnetic spectrum. The spacecraft were also equipped with
instruments for studying magnetic fields and for detecting charged
particles and interplanetary grains. Pioneer 11 discovered two previously unknown moons, and the Voyager flybys found six more.
In October 1997 the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA), the European Space Agency, the Italian Space
Agency, and several other partners launched the Cassini
orbiter, named after the Italian-born French astronomer Gian Domenico
Cassini (1625-1712). After achieving orbit around Saturn at the end of
June 2004, the spacecraft will study the planet's system for at least
four years; included in its mission is the release of the Huygens probe to the surface of Saturn's moon Titan.
Consisting mainly of hydrogen, Saturn has a mean
density about one-eighth that of the earth. The enormous weight of
Saturn's atmosphere causes the atmospheric pressure to increase rapidly
toward the interior, where the hydrogen gas condenses into a liquid.
Closer to the center of the planet, the liquid hydrogen is compressed
into metallic hydrogen, which is an electrical conductor. Electrical
currents in this metallic hydrogen are responsible for the planet's
magnetic field. At the center of Saturn, heavy elements have probably
settled into a small rocky core with a temperature close to 15,000° C
(27,000° F). Both Jupiter and Saturn are still settling
gravitationally, following their original accretion from the gas and
dust nebula from which the solar system was formed more than 4 billion
years ago. This contraction generates heat, causing Saturn to radiate
into space three times as much heat as it receives from the sun.
Saturn's main atmospheric constituents are, in order by
volume, hydrogen (up to 96 percent) and helium (about 3 percent). The
atmosphere also includes traces of methane, ammonia, ammonia crystals,
and such other gases as ethane, acetylene, and phosphine. Voyager
images showed whirls and eddies of clouds occurring deep in a haze that
is much thicker than that of Jupiter because of Saturn's lower
temperature, which at the cloud tops is close to -176° C (-285° F).
Based on the movements of Saturnian storm clouds, the
period of rotation of the atmosphere near the equator is about 10 hr 11
min. Radio emissions that have been detected coming from the body of
the planet indicate that the body of Saturn and its magnetosphere
rotate with a period of 10 hr 39 min 25 sec. The approximately 28.5-min
difference between these two times indicates that Saturnian equatorial
winds have velocities close to 1700 km/hr (1060 mph).
In 1988, from studies of Voyager photos, scientists
determined an odd atmospheric feature around Saturn's north pole. What
may be a standing-wave pattern, repeated six times around the planet,
makes cloud bands some distance from the pole appear to form a huge,
permanent hexagon.
Saturn's magnetic field is substantially weaker than
that of Jupiter, and Saturn's magnetosphere is about one-third the size
of Jupiter's. Saturn's magnetosphere consists of a set of
doughnut-shaped radiation belts in which electrons and atomic nuclei
are trapped. The belts extend to more than 2 million km (1.3 million
mi) from the center of Saturn and even farther in the direction away
from the sun, although the size of the magnetosphere fluctuates,
depending on the intensity of the solar wind (the flow of charged
particles from the sun). The solar wind and Saturn's rings and
satellites supply the particles that are trapped in the radiation
belts. The rotation period of 10 hr 39 min 25 sec for Saturn's interior
was measured by Voyager 1 while passing through the
magnetosphere, which rotates in synchrony with the interior of Saturn.
The magnetosphere interacts with the ionosphere, the topmost layer of
Saturn's atmosphere, causing auroral emissions of ultraviolet radiation.
Surrounding the Saturnian satellite Titan and Titan's
orbit, and extending to Rhea's orbit, is an enormous toroidal cloud of
neutral hydrogen atoms. A disk of plasma, composed of hydrogen and
possibly oxygen ions, extends from outside the orbit of Tethys almost
to the orbit of Titan. The plasma rotates in nearly perfect synchrony
with Saturn's magnetic field.
The visible rings stretch out to a distance of 136,200
km (84,650 mi) from Saturn's center, but in many regions they may be
only 5 m (16.4 ft) thick. They are thought to consist of aggregates of
rock, frozen gases, and water ice ranging in size from less than 0.0005
cm (0.0002 in) in diameter to about 10 m (33 ft) in diameter-from dust
to boulder size. An instrument aboard Voyager 2 counted more than 100,000 ringlets in the Saturnian system.
The apparent separation between the A and B rings is
called Cassini's division, after the 17th-century astronomer who
discovered it. The Voyager television cameras imaged five new
faint rings within Cassini's division. The wide B and C rings appear to
consist of hundreds of ringlets, some slightly elliptical, that exhibit
rippling density variations. The gravitational interaction between
rings and satellites, which causes these density waves, is still not
completely understood. The B ring appears bright when viewed from the
side illuminated by the sun, but dark on the other side because it is
dense enough to block most of the sunlight. Voyager images have also
revealed in the B ring radial, rotating spokelike patterns.
As of early 2004, 31 satellites orbiting Saturn had
been identified; 13 of these are small moons detected in 2000 and 2003.
Of Saturn's 18 principal satellites, only 10 were known from
earth-based observations; the rest were discovered by the Pioneer and Voyager
spacecraft. Their diameters range from 20 to 5150 km (12 to 3200 mi).
They consist mostly of the lighter, icy substances that prevailed in
the outer parts of the gas and dust nebula from which the solar system
was formed and where radiation from the distant sun could not evaporate
the frozen gases.
The five larger inner satellites-Mimas, Enceladus,
Tethys, Dione, and Rhea-are roughly spherical in shape and composed
mostly of water ice. Rocky material may constitute up to 40 percent of
Dione's mass. The surfaces of the five are heavily cratered by
meteorite impacts. Enceladus has a smoother surface than the others,
the least cratered area on its surface being less than a few hundred
million years old. Astronomers suspect that Enceladus supplies
particles to the E ring, which neighbors Enceladus's orbit. Mimas, far
from being smooth, displays an impact crater the diameter of which is
one-third of the diameter of the satellite itself. Tethys also bears a
large crater and a valley 100 km (62 mi) in width that stretches more
than 2000 km (1200 mi) across the surface. Both Dione and Rhea have
bright, wispy streaks on their already highly reflective surfaces. Some
scientists conjecture these were caused either by ice ejected from
craters by meteorites, or by fresh ice that has migrated from the
interior.
The outer satellites Hyperion and Iapetus also consist
mainly of water ice. Iapetus has a very dark region in contrast to most
of its surface, which is bright. This dark region and the rotation of
the satellite are the cause of the variations of brightness that were
noticed by Cassini in 1671. Phoebe, the farthest satellite, moves in a
retrograde orbit that is highly inclined to Saturn's equator. Phoebe is
probably a cometary body that was captured by Saturn's gravitational
field.
| Principal Satellites of Saturn |
| Name |
Mean distance from Neptune |
Diameter |
| Pan |
133,600 km (83,000 mi) |
20 km (12 mi) |
| Atlas |
137,700 km (85,600 mi) |
32 km (20 mi) |
| Prometheus |
139,400 km (86,600 mi) |
100 km (62 mi) |
| Pandora |
141,700 km (88,000 mi) |
84 km (52 mi) |
| Epimetheus |
151,400 km (94,100 mi) |
119 km (74 mi) |
| Janus |
151,500 km (94,100 mi) |
178 km (111 mi) |
| Mimas |
185,600 km (115,300 mi) |
397 km (247 mi) |
| Enceladus |
238,100 km (147,900 mi) |
499 km (310 mi) |
| Telesto |
294,700 km (183,100 mi) |
24 km (15 mi) |
| Tethys |
294,700 km (183,100 mi) |
1060 km (659 mi) |
| Calypso |
294,700 km (183,100 mi) |
19 km (12 mi) |
| Dione |
377,400 km (234,500 mi) |
1118 km (695 mi) |
| Helene |
377,400 km (234,500 mi) |
32 km (20 mi) |
| Rhea |
527,100 km (327,500 mi) |
1528 km (949 mi) |
| Titan |
1,221,900 km (759,300 mi) |
5150 km (3200 mi) |
| Hyperion |
1,464,100 km (909,700 mi) |
266 km (165 mi) |
| Iapetus |
3,560,800 km (2,212,600 mi) |
1436 km (892 mi) |
| Phoebe |
12,944,300 km (8,043,200 mi) |
120 km (75 mi) |
Between the inner and outer satellites orbits
Titan, Saturn's largest moon. Its diameter is 5150 km (3200 mi), larger
even than the planet Mercury. Titan's topography is not yet known
because a dense orange haze obscures the surface; a 1994 photograph by
the Hubble Space Telescope however, suggests the existence of large
bright and dark areas beneath the haze. The thickness of Titan's
atmosphere is probably about 300 km (about 186 mi). Titan has a
nitrogen atmosphere with traces of methane, ethane, acetylene,
ethylene, hydrogen cyanide, and carbon monoxide and dioxide. On the
surface, the temperature is about -182° C (-296° F), and methane or
ethane may be present in the forms of rain, snow, ice, and vapor. The
interior of Titan probably consists of equal amounts of rock and water
ice. No magnetic fields have been detected.
Named for the 17th century astronomer who discovered Titan, the Huygens probe is scheduled to be deployed by the Cassini
spacecraft in December 2004 and to reach Titan the following month. The
probe is expected to transmit data about the moon's atmosphere and
surface. Scientists believe that Titan's environment is similar in many
ways to conditions on earth before life began.