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- FACT SHEET: VOYAGER SATURN SCIENCE SUMMARY
-
- The Voyager 1 and 2 Saturn encounters occurred nine
- months apart, in November 1980 and August 1981. Voyager 1 is
- leaving the solar system. Voyager 2 completed its encounter with
- Uranus in January 1986 and with Neptune in August 1989, and is
- now also en route out of the solar system.
- The two Saturn encounters increased our knowledge and
- altered our understanding of Saturn. The extended, close-range
- observations provided high-resolution data far different from the
- picture assembled during centuries of Earth-based studies.
- Here is a summary of scientific findings by the two
- Voyagers at Saturn:
- SATURN
- Saturn's atmosphere is almost entirely hydrogen and
- helium. Voyager 1 found that about 7 percent of the volume of
- Saturn's upper atmosphere is helium (compared with 11 percent of
- Jupiter's atmosphere), while almost all the rest is hydrogen.
- Since Saturn's internal helium abundance was expected to be the
- same as Jupiter's and the Sun's, the lower abundance of helium in
- the upper atmosphere may imply that the heavier helium may be
- slowly sinking through Saturn's hydrogen; that might explain the
- excess heat that Saturn radiates over energy it receives from the
- Sun. (Saturn is the only planet less dense than water. In the
- unlikely event that a lake could be found large enough, Saturn
- would float in it.)
- Subdued contrasts and color differences on Saturn could
- be a result of more horizontal mixing or less production of
- localized colors than in Jupiter's atmosphere. While Voyager 1
- saw few markings, Voyager 2's more sensitive cameras saw many:
- Long-lived ovals, tilted features in east-west shear zones, and
- others similar to, but generally smaller than, on Jupiter.
- Winds blow at high speeds in Saturn. Near the equator,
- the Voyagers measured winds about 500 meters a second (1,100
- miles an hour). The wind blows mostly in an easterly direction.
- Strongest winds are found near the equator, and velocity falls
- off uniformly at higher latitudes. At latitudes greater than 35
- degrees, winds alternate east and west as latitude increases.
- Marked dominance of eastward jet streams indicates that winds are
- not confined to the cloud layer, but must extend inward at least
- 2,000 kilometers (1,200 miles). Furthermore, measurements by
- Voyager 2 showing a striking north-south symmetry that leads some
- scientists to suggest the winds may extend from north to south
- through the interior of the planet.
- While Voyager 2 was behind Saturn, its radio beam
- penetrated the upper atmosphere, and measured temperature and
- density. Minimum temperatures of 82 Kelvins (-312 degrees
- Fahrenheit) were found at the 70-millibar level (surface pressure
- on Earth is 1,000 millibars). The temperature increased to 143
- Kelvins (-202 degrees Fahrenheit) at the deepest levels probed -
- - about 1,200 millibars. Near the north pole temperatures were
- about 10 degrees Celsius (18 degrees Fahrenheit) colder at 100
-
- millibars than at mid-latitudes. The difference may be seasonal.
- The Voyagers found aurora-like ultraviolet emissions of
- hydrogen at mid-latitudes in the atmosphere, and auroras at polar
- latitudes (above 65 degrees). The high-level auroral activity
- may lead to formation of complex hydrocarbon molecules that are
- carried toward the equator. The mid-latitude auroras, which
- occur only in sunlit regions, remain a puzzle, since bombardment
- by electrons and ions, known to cause auroras on Earth, occurs
- primarily at high latitudes.
- Both Voyagers measured the rotation of Saturn (the
- length of a day) at 10 hours, 39 minutes, 24 seconds.
- THE RINGS
- Perhaps the greatest surprises and the most perplexing
- puzzles the two Voyagers found are in the rings.
- Voyager 1 found much structure in the classical A-, B-
- and C-rings. Some scientists suggest that the structure might be
- unresolved ringlets and gaps. Photos by Voyager 1 were of lower
- resolution than those of Voyager 2, and scientists at first
- believed the gaps might be created by tiny satellites orbiting
- within the rings and sweeping out bands of particles. One such
- gap was detected at the inner edge of the Cassini Division.
- Voyager 2 measurements provided the data scientists
- need to understand the structure. High-resolution photos of the
- inner edge of the Cassini Division showed no sign of satellites
- larger than five to nine kilometers (three to six miles). No
- systematic searches were conducted in other ring gaps.
- Voyager 2's photopolarimeter provided more surprises.
- The instrument measured changes in starlight from Delta Scorpii
- as Voyager 2 flew above the rings and the light passed through
- them. The photopolarimeter could resolve structure smaller than
- 300 meters (1,000 feet).
- The star-occultation experiment showed that few clear
- gaps exist in the rings. The structure in the B-ring, instead,
- appears to be variations in density waves or other, stationary,
- forms of waves. Density waves are formed by the gravitational
- effects of Saturn's satellites. (The resonant points are places
- where a particle would orbit Saturn in one-half or one-third the
- time needed by a satellite, such as Mimas.) For example, at the
- 2:1 resonant point with 1980S1, a series of outward-propagating
- density waves has about 60 grams of material per square
- centimeter of ring area, and the velocity of particles relative
- to one another is about one millimeter per second. Small-scale
- structure of the rings may therefore be transitory, although
- larger-scale features, such as the Cassini and Encke Divisions,
- appear more permanent.
- The edges of the rings where the few gaps exist are so
- sharp that the ring must be less than about 200 meters (650 feet)
- thick there, and may be only 10 meters (33 feet) thick.
- In almost every case where clear gaps do appear in the
- rings, eccentric ringlets are found. All show variations in
- brightness. Some differences are due to clumping or kinking, and
- others to nearly complete absence of material. Some scientists
-
- believe the only plausible explanation for the clear regions and
- kinky ringlets is the presence of nearby undetected satellites.
- Two separate, discontinuous ringlets were found in the
- A-ring gap, known as Encke's Gap, about 73,000 kilometers (45,000
- miles) from Saturn's cloud tops. At high resolution, at least
- one of the ringlets has multiple strands.
- Saturn's F-ring was discovered by Pioneer 11 in 1979.
- Photos of the F-ring taken by Voyager 1 showed three separate
- strands that appear twisted or braided. At higher resolution,
- Voyager 2 found five separate strands in a region that had no
- apparent braiding, and surprisingly revealed only one small
- region where the F-ring appeared twisted. The photopolarimeter
- found the brightest of the F-ring strands was subdivided into at
- least 10 strands. The twists are believed to originate in
- gravitational perturbations caused by one of two shepherding
- satellites, 1980S27. Clumps in the F-ring appear uniformly
- distributed around the ring every 9,000 kilometers (6,999 miles),
- a spacing that very nearly coincides with the relative motion of
- F-ring particles and the interior shepherding satellite in one
- orbital period. By analogy, similar mechanisms might be
- operating for the kinky ringlets that exist in the Encke Gap.
- The spokes found in the B-ring appear only at radial
- distances between 43,000 kilometers (27,000 miles) and 57,000
- kilometers (35,000 miles) above Saturn's clouds. Some spokes,
- those thought to be most recently formed, are narrow and have a
- radial alignment, and appear to corotate with Saturn's magneticfield in 10 hours, 39.4 minutes. The broader, less radial spokes
- appear to have formed earlier than the narrow examples and seem
- to follow Keplerian orbits: Individual areas corotate at speeds
- governed by distances from the center of the planet. In some
- cases, scientists believe they see evidence that new spokes are
- reprinted over older ones. Their formation is not restricted to
- regions near the planet's shadow, but seems to favor a particular
- Saturnian longitude. As both spacecraft approached Saturn, the
- spokes appeared dark against a bright ring background. As the
- Voyagers departed, the spokes appeared brighter than the
- surrounding ring areas, indicating that the material scatters
- reflected sunlight more efficiently in a forward direction, a
- quality that is characteristic of fine, dust-sized particles.
- Spokes are also visible at high phase angles in light reflected
- from Saturn on the unilluminated underside of the rings.
- Another challenge scientists face in understanding the
- rings is that even general dimensions do not seem to remain true
- at all positions around Saturn: The distance of the B-ring;s
- outer edge, near a 2:1 resonance with Mimas, varies by at least
- 140 kilometers (90 miles) and probably by as much as 200
- kilometers (120 miles). Furthermore, the elliptical shape of the
- outer edge does not follow a Keplerian orbit, since Saturn is at
- the center of the ellipse, rather than at one focus. The
- gravitational effects of Mimas are most likely responsible for
- the elliptical shape, as well as for the variable width of the
- Huygens Gap between the B-ring and the Cassini Division.
-
- TITAN
- Titan is the largest of Saturn's satellites. It is the
- second largest satellite in the solar system, and the only one
- know to have a dense atmosphere.
- It may be the most interesting body, from a terrestrial
- perspective, in the solar system. For almost two decades, space
- scientists have searched for clues to the primeval Earth. The
- chemistry in Titan's atmosphere may be similar to what occurred
- in Earth's atmosphere several billion years ago.
- Because of its thick, opaque atmosphere, astronomers
- believed Titan was the largest satellite in the solar system.
- Their measurements were necessarily limited to the cloud tops.
- Voyager 1's close approach and diametric radio occultation show
- Titan's surface diameter is only 5,150 kilometers (3,200 miles) -
- - slightly smaller than Ganymede, Jupiter's largest satellite.
- Both are larger than Mercury. Titan's density appears to be
- about twice that of water ice; it may be composed of nearly equal
- amounts of rock and ice.
- Titan's surface cannot be seen in any Voyager photos;
- it is hidden by a dense, photochemical haze whose main layer is
- about 300 kilometers (200 miles) above Titan's surface. Several
- distinct, detached haze layers can be seen above the opaque haze
- layer. The haze layers merge with the main layer over the north
- pole of Titan, forming what scientists first thought was a dark
- hood. The hood was found, under the better viewing conditions of
- Voyager 2, to be a dark ring around the pole. The southernhemisphere is slightly brighter than the northern, possibly the
- result of seasonal effects. When the Voyagers flew past, the
- season on Titan was the equivalent of mid-April and early May on
- Earth, or early spring in the northern hemisphere and early fall
- in the south.
- Atmospheric pressure near Titan's surface is about 1.6
- bars, 60 percent greater than Earth's. The atmosphere is mostly
- nitrogen, also the major constituent of Earth's atmosphere.
- The surface temperature appears to be about 95 Kelvins
- (-289 degrees Fahrenheit), only 4 Kelvins above the triple-point
- temperature of methane. Methane, however, appears to be below
- its saturation pressure near Titan's surface; rivers and lakes of
- methane probably don't exist, in spite of the tantalizing analogy
- to water on Earth. On the other hand, scientists believe lakes
- of ethane exist, and methane is probably dissolved in the ethane.
- Titan's methane, through continuing photochemistry, is converted
- to ethane, acetylene, ethylene, and (when combined with nitrogen)
- hydrogen cyanide. The last is an especially important molecule;
- it is a building block of amino acids. Titan's low temperature
- undoubtedly inhibits more complex organic chemistry.
- Titan has no intrinsic magnetic field; therefore it has
- no electrically conducting and convecting liquid core. Its
- interaction with Saturn's magnetosphere creates a magnetic wake
- behind Titan. The big satellite also serves as a source for both
- neutral and charged hydrogen atoms in Saturn's magnetosphere.
-
-
- NEW SATELLITES
- Before the first Voyager encounter, astronomers
- believed Saturn had 11 satellites. Now they know it has at least
- 17 and possibly more. Three of the 17 were discovered by Voyager
- 1. Three additional possible satellites have been identified in
- imaging data since the Voyager 2 encounter. (Three others were
- discovered in ground-based observations.)
- The innermost satellite, Atlas, orbits near the outer
- edge of the A-ring and is about 40 by 20 kilometers (25 by 15
- miles) in size. It was discovered in Voyager 1 images.
- The next satellite outward, Prometheus, shepherds the
- inner edge of the F-ring and is about 140 by 100 by 80 kilometers
- (90 by 60 by 50 miles). Next is Pandora, outer shepherd of the
- F-ring, 110 by 90 by 80 kilometers (70 by 55 by 50 miles). Both
- shepherds were found by Voyager 1.
- Next are Epimetheus and Janus, which share about the
- same orbit -- 91,000 kilometers (56,600 miles) above the clouds.
- As they near each other, the satellites trade orbits (the outer
- is about 50 kilometers, or 30 miles, farther from Saturn than the
- inner). Janus is 220 by 200 by 160 kilometers (140 by 125 by 100
- miles), and Epimetheus is 140 by 120 by 100 kilometers (90 by 70
- by 50 miles). Both were discovered by ground-based observers.
- One new satellite, Helene, shares the orbit of Dione,
- about 60 degrees ahead of its larger companion, and is called the
- Dione Trojan. It is about 36 by 32 by 30 kilometers (22 by 20 by
- 19 miles). Helene was discovered in ground-based photographs.
- Two more satellites are called the Tethys Trojans
- because they circle Saturn in the same orbit as Tethys, about 60
- degrees ahead of and behind that body. They are Telesto (the
- leading Trojan) and Calypso (the trailing Trojan). Both were
- found in 1981 among ground-based observations made in 1980.
- Telesto is 34 by 28 by 26 kilometers (21 by 17 by 16 miles) and
- Calypso is 34 by 22 by 22 kilometers (21 by 14 by 14 miles).
- There are three unconfirmed satellites. One circles
- Saturn in the orbit of Dione, a second is located between the
- orbits of Tethys and Dione, and the third, between Dione and
- Rhea. All three were found in Voyager photographs, but were not
- confirmed by more than one sighting.
- OTHER SATELLITES
- Mimas, Enceladus, Tethys, Dione, and Rhea are
- approximately spherical in shape and appear to be composed mostly
- of water ice. Enceladus reflects almost 100 percent of the
- sunlight that strikes it. All five satellites represent a size
- range that had not been explored before.
- Mimas, Tethys, Dione, and Rhea are all cratered;
- Enceladus appears to have by far the most active surface of any
- satellite in the system (with the possible exception of Titan,
- whose surface was not photographed). At least five types of
- terrain have been identified on Enceladus. Although craters can
- be seen across portions of its surface, the lack of craters in
- other areas implies an age less than a few hundred million years
- for the youngest regions. It seems likely that parts of the
-
- surface are still undergoing change, since some areas are covered
- by ridged plains with no evidence of cratering down to the limit
- of resolution of Voyager 2's cameras (2 kilometers or 1.2 miles).
- A pattern of linear faults crisscrosses other areas. It is not
- likely that a satellite as small as Enceladus could have enough
- radioactive material to produce the modification. A more likely
- source of heating appears to be tidal interaction with Saturn,
- caused by perturbations in Enceladus' orbit by Dione (like
- Jupiter's satellite Io). Theories of tidal heating do not
- predict generation of enough energy to explain all the heating
- that must have occurred. Because it reflects so much sunlight,
- Enceladus' current surface temperature is only 72 Kelvins (-330
- degrees Fahrenheit).
- Photos of Mimas show a huge impact crater. The crater,
- named Herschel, is 130 kilometers (80 miles) wide, one-third the
- diameter of Mimas. Herschel is 10 kilometers (6 miles) deep,
- with a central mountain almost as high as Mount Everest on Earth.
- Photos of Tethys taken by Voyager 2 show an even larger
- impact crater, named Odysseus, nearly one-third the diameter of
- Tethys and larger than Mimas. In contrast to Mimas' Herschel,
- the floor of Odysseus returned to about the original shape of the
- surface, most likely a result of Tethys' larger gravity and the
- relative fluidity of water ice. A gigantic fracture covers
- three-fourths of Tethys' circumference. The fissure is about the
- size scientists would predict if Tethys were once fluid and its
- crust hardened before the interior, although the expansion of theinterior due to freezing would not be expected to cause only one
- large crack. The canyon has been named Ithaca Chasma. Tethys'
- surface temperature is 86 Kelvins (-305 degrees Fahrenheit).
- Hyperion shows no evidence of internal activity. Its
- irregular shape causes an unusual phenomenon: Each time Hyperion
- passes Titan, the larger satellite's gravity gives Hyperion a tug
- and it tumbles erratically, changing orientation. The irregular
- shape of Hyperion and evidence of bombardment by meteors make it
- appear to be the oldest surface in the Saturn system.
- Iapetus has long been known to have large differences
- in surface brightness. Brightness of the surface material on the
- trailing side has been measured at 50 percent, while material on
- the leading side reflects only 5 percent of the sunlight. Most
- dark material is distributed in a pattern directly centered on
- the leading surface, causing conjecture that dark material in
- orbit around Saturn was swept up by Iapetus. The trailing face
- of Iapetus, however, has craters with dark floors. That implies
- that the dark material originated in the satellite's interior.
- It is possible that the dark material on the leading hemisphere
- was exposed by ablation (erosion) of a thin, overlying, bright
- surface covering.
- Voyager 2 photographed Phoebe after passing Saturn.
- Phoebe orbits Saturn in a retrograde direction (opposite to the
- direction of the other satellites' orbits) in a plane much closer
- to the ecliptic than to Saturn's equatorial plane. Voyager 2
- found that Phoebe has a roughly circular shape, and reflects
-
- about 6 percent of the sunlight. It also is quite red. Phoebe
- rotates on its axis about once in nine hours. Thus, unlike the
- other Saturnian satellites (except Hyperion), it does not always
- show the same face to the planet. If, as scientists believe,
- Phoebe is a captured asteroid with its composition unmodified
- since its formation in the outer solar system, it is the first
- such object that has been photographed at close enough range to
- show shape and surface brightness.
- Both Dione and Rhea have bright, wispy streaks that
- stand out against an already-bright surface. The streaks are
- probably the results of ice that evolved from the interior along
- fractures in the crust.
- THE MAGNETOSPHERE
- The size of Saturn's magnetosphere is determined by
- external pressure of the solar wind. When Voyager 2 entered the
- magnetosphere, the solar-wind pressure was high and the magneto-
- sphere extended only 19 Saturn radii (1.1 million kilometers or
- 712,000 miles) in the Sun's direction. Several hours later,
- however, the solar-wind pressure dropped and Saturn's magneto-
- sphere ballooned outward over a six-hour period. It apparently
- remained inflated for at least three days, since it was 70
- percent larger when Voyager 2 crossed the magnetic boundary on
- the outbound leg.
- Unlike all the other planets whose magnetic fields have
- been measured, Saturn's field is tipped less than one degree
- relative to the rotation poles. That rare alignment was firstmeasured by Pioneer 11 in 1979 and was later confirmed by
- Voyagers 1 and 2.
- Several distinct regions have been identified within
- Saturn's magnetosphere. Inside about 400,000 kilometers (250,000
- miles) there is a torus of H+ and O+ ions, probably originating
- from water ice sputtered from the surfaces of Dione and Tethys.
- (The ions are positively charged atoms of hydrogen and oxygen
- that have lost one electron.) Strong plasma-wave emissions
- appear to be associated with the inner torus.
- At the outer regions of the inner torus some ions have
- been accelerated to high velocities. In terms of temperatures,
- such velocities correspond to 400 million to 500 million Kelvins
- (700 to 900 million degrees Fahrenheit).
- Outside the inner torus is a thick sheet of plasma that
- extends out to about 1 million kilometers (600,000 miles). The
- source for material in the outer plasma sheet is probably
- Saturn's ionosphere, Titan's atmosphere, and the neutral hydrogen
- torus that surrounds Titan between 500,000 kilometers (300,000
- miles) and 1.5 million kilometers (1 million miles).
- Radio emissions from Saturn had changed between the
- encounters of Voyager 1 and 2. Voyager 2 detected Jupiter's
- magnetotail as the spacecraft approached Saturn in the winter and
- early spring of 1981. Son afterward, when Saturn was believed to
- be bathed in the Jovian magnetotail, the ringed planet's
- kilometric radio emissions were undetectable.
- During portions of Voyager 2's Saturn encounter,
-
- kilometric radio emissions again were not detected. The
- observations are consistent with Saturn's being immersed in
- Jupiter's magnetotail, as was also the apparent reduction in
- solar-wind pressure mentioned earlier, although Voyager
- scientists say they have no direct evidence that those effects
- were caused by Jupiter's magnetotail.
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- 5/4/90DB
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