HST High-Resolution Backscatter Image of Saturn's G Ring
β Scribed by Jack J. Lissauer; Richard G. French
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 338 KB
- Volume
- 146
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0019-1035
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
we imaged Saturn's faint G ring with the Hubble Space Telescope's WFPC2 Planetary Camera. This is the highest resolution image of the G ring ever obtained in backscattered light, with an image scale of only 282 km per pixel. The 400-s exposure was taken using the F555W filter at a solar phase angle of Ξ± = 1.93 β’ and a ring tilt of B = -3.82 β’ as seen from Earth. The radial profile of the ring was derived from azimuthal averages of the ring brightness. It is highly asymmetric, with a sharp inner edge that is abrupt at the limit of our resolution, rising from 20 to 80% of maximum intensity over a distance of less than 700 km. Outward of its peak at r = 169,000 km, the G ring brightness gradually diminishes over several thousand kilometers. From a high SNR profile, averaged over ring longitudes within 25 β’ of the East (morning) ansa, the full-width at half-maximum intensity of the G ring is βΌ5200 km; higher resolution, lower SNR, profiles suggest a somewhat smaller ring width. The similarities between the radial structure seen from the HST in backscatter, and the highest resolution Voyager 1 and 2 profiles obtained in forward scattered light, imply that dust and macroscopic particles have similar distributions within the G ring.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The Doppler-limited absorption spectrum of the vibrotational lines in the A 3 P 1u R X 1 S / g system of I 2 was measured in the region from 11,200 to 12,450 cm 01 using a Ti:sapphire ring laser. The Q-branch lines of J Γ 10 to 100 belonging to the Β£ R Β£Π Γ (26 Γ 45) R 0Π, (19 Γ 45) R 1Π, (16 Γ 45)