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Saturn's Rings I: Optical Depth Profiles from the 28 Sgr Occultation

✍ Scribed by Philip D. Nicholson; Richard G. French; Eric Tollestrup; Jeffrey N. Cuzzi; Joseph Harrington; Keith Matthews; Olga Perković; Richard J. Stover


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
517 KB
Volume
145
Category
Article
ISSN
0019-1035

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✦ Synopsis


We present optical depth profiles for Saturn's rings at wavelengths of 0.9, 2.1, 3.3, and 3.9 µm, obtained from the occultation of the star 28 Sgr on 3 July 1989 when the rings were near their maximum opening angle. The radial resolution of the data is ∼18 km, as set by the angular diameter of the star. Very few, if any, structural changes are observed in the rings since the Voyager encounters in 1980/1981. Azimuthal variations in optical depth are restricted to the outermost part of the B Ring and to several previously known noncircular features. The mean optical depth in the heretofore unprobed central part of the B Ring is found to be 2.3 ± 0.15 at 3.9 µm. Quantitative comparisons of the optical depths with those measured by the Voyager PPS stellar occultation experiment at 0.27 µm do reveal systematic differences between the major ring regions. In the C Ring, we find τ 28 Sgr /τ PPS 1.4, while in the B Ring and outer A Ring τ 28 Sgr /τ PPS 1.0. Only in the inner A Ring is τ 28 Sgr < τ PPS . In agreement with previous studies at microwave and optical wavelengths, we conclude that there is very little evidence in the 28 Sgr data for a significant population of micrometer-sized particles anywhere in the main rings. Most of the observed variation in τ 28 Sgr /τ PPS can instead be attributed to variations in the particle size distribution in the rings in the centimeter to meter size range, which controls the angular width of the rings' forward-scattering cross section. This in turn controls the effective extinction efficiency for Earth-based occultation experiments, and thus the measured optical depth. In a companion paper we use 474


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## We analyze an extensive data set of immersion and emersion 2 Visiting Astronomer, Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, lightcurves of the occultation of 28 Sgr by Saturn's atmosphere National Optical Astronomy Observatories, operated by the Association on 3 July 1989. The data give profiles