°µĶų½ūĒų

Skip to main content

In its final days, Cassini bathed in 'ring rain'

On its last orbits in 2017, the long-running Cassini spacecraft dove between Saturnā€™s rings and its upper atmosphere and bathed in a downpour of dust that astronomers call ā€œring rain.ā€

In research published today in Science, CU Boulderā€™s Hsiang-Wen (Sean) Hsu and his colleagues report that they successfully collected microscopic material streaming from the planetā€™s rings.

ā€œOur measurements show what exactly these materials are, how they are distributed and how much dust is coming into Saturn,ā€ said Hsu, lead author of the paper and a research associate at the (LASP).

The findings, which were made with Cassiniā€™s Cosmic Dust Analyzer and Radio and Plasma Wave Science instruments, come a little more than a year after the spacecraft burned up in Saturnā€™s atmosphere. They stem from the missionā€™s ā€œgrand finale,ā€ in which Cassini completed a series of risky maneuvers to zip under the planetā€™s rings at speeds of 75,000 miles per hour.

Diagram of Cassini's final orbits

In its 22 "grand finale" orbits (blue), Cassini zipped through the 1,200 mile-wide space between the Saturn's rings and its atmosphere. The spacecraft's penultimate series of orbits (yellow) grazed the planet's outermost rings. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

Capturing dust under those conditions was an engineering and navigational coup, the researchers saidā€”a snatch-and-run that the mission team had been planning since 2010.

ā€œThis is the first time that pieces from Saturnā€™s rings have been analyzed with a human-made instrument,ā€ said Sascha Kempf, a co-author of the new study and a research associate at LASP and associate professor in the . ā€œIf you had asked us years ago if this was even possible, we would have told you ā€˜no way.ā€™ā€

The research is one of a appearing today in Science. NASAā€™s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) managed the mission, which was a cooperative effort of NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA) and Italian Space Agency. Ralf Srama of the University of Stuttgart leads research using the spacecraftā€™s Cosmic Dust Analyzer, and William Kurth of the University of Iowa leads Radio and Plasma Wave Science.

Beautiful physics

Catching that ring rainā€”which astrophysicists had predicted based on studies of Saturnā€™s upper atmosphereā€”in action wasnā€™t easy: Getting too close to a planetā€™s rings risks shredding the spacecraft.

With Cassini running low on fuel in 2017, however, mission scientists decided to take the chance. Cassini made 22 passes around Saturn, threading between the planetā€™s closest ring and its upper atmosphere, a space less than 1,200 miles wide.Ģż

During eight of those final orbits, the Cosmic Dust Analyzer trapped more than 2,700 charged bits of dust. Based on the groupā€™s calculations, thatā€™s enough ring rain to send about one metric ton of material into Saturnā€™s atmosphere every second.

But those particles didnā€™t fall directly into the planet by gravity alone. Instead, the team suspects that they gyrate along Saturnā€™s magnetic field lines like a yo-yo before crashing into the atmosphere.Ģż

ā€œItā€™s a beautiful display of physics at work,ā€ said study co-author MihĆ”ly HorĆ”nyi, a professor in physics at CU Boulder.

Dirty snowballs

The researchers were also able to study what that planetary dust was made of. Most of the particles were bits of water iceā€”the main component of Saturnā€™s rings. But the spacecraft also picked up a lot of tiny silicates, a class of molecules that make up many space rocks.

That finding is important, Hsu said, because it could help answer a nagging question about Saturn: how old are its rings? He explained that icy objects in space are a bit like bookshelves in your house.

The Future of Dust

The (IMPACT), affiliated with CU Boulder, is participating in several projects exploring space dust, including:

  • Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesophere (AIM):
  • New Horizons: (SDC)
  • Europa Clipper: (SUDA)
  • Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP): (IDEX)

ā€œIt is really difficult to maintain a pure ice surface in the solar system because you always have dirty material coming at you,ā€ Hsu said. ā€œOne of the things we want to understand is how clean or dirty the rings are.ā€

If scientists can identify the exact types of silicates that coat Saturnā€™s rings, they may be able to tell whether those features are billions of years old or much younger. Hsuā€™s colleagues are currently working to make those identifications. Researchers at LASP are also building on what they learned from Cassiniā€™s Cosmic Dust Analyzer to design similar dust-catching instruments for NASAā€™s (IMAP) and missions.

As for Cassini, ā€œI am sure there will be surprises yet to come,ā€ said HorĆ”nyi, who is also a co-investigator on the Cosmic Dust Analyzer. ā€œWe still have enormous amounts of data that we have to sort out and analyze.ā€

Other co-authors on the study include researchers at the University of Oulu; Heidelberg University; Free University of Berlin; University of Stuttgart; Potsdam University; JPL; University of Iowa; NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; Boston University; NASA Ames Research Center; University College London; University of London; and Baylor University.