134 research outputs found
The Smallest Particles in Saturn's A and C Rings
Radio occultations of Saturn's main rings by spacecraft suggest a power law
particle size-distribution down to sizes of the order of 1 cm (Marouf et al.,
1983), (Zebker et al., 1985). The lack of optical depth variations between
ultraviolet and near-IR wavelengths indicate a lack of micron-sized particles.
Between these two regimes, the particle-size distribution is largely unknown. A
cutoff where the particle-size distribution turns over must exist, but the
position and shape of it is not clear from existing studies.
Using a series of solar occultations performed by the VIMS instrument
on-board Cassini in the near-infrared, we are able to measure light forward
scattered by particles in the A and C rings. With a model of diffraction by
ring particles, and the previous radio work as a constraint on the slope of the
particle size distribution, we estimate the minimum particle size using a
truncated power-law size distribution. The C Ring shows a minimum particle size
of mm, with an assumed power law index of q=3.1 and a
maximum particle size of 10 m.
The A Ring signal shows a similar level of scattered flux, but modeling is
complicated by the presence of self-gravity wakes and higher optical depths. If
q<3, our A Ring model requires a minimum particle size below one millimeter (<
0.34 mm for an assumed q=2.75, or mm for a steeper
q=2.9) to be consistent with VIMS observations. These results might seem to
contradict previous optical(Dones et al., 1993) and infrared (French and
Nicholson, 2000) work, which implied that there were few particles in the A
Ring smaller than 1 cm. But, because of the shallow power law, relatively
little optical depth (between 0.03 and 0.16 in extinction, or 0.015 - 0.08 in
absorption) is provided by these particles.Comment: 47 pages, 16 figures, 3 Table
High Angular Resolution Stellar Imaging with Occultations from the Cassini Spacecraft II: Kronocyclic Tomography
We present an advance in the use of Cassini observations of stellar
occultations by the rings of Saturn for stellar studies. Stewart et al. (2013)
demonstrated the potential use of such observations for measuring stellar
angular diameters. Here, we use these same observations, and tomographic
imaging reconstruction techniques, to produce two dimensional images of complex
stellar systems. We detail the determination of the basic observational
reference frame. A technique for recovering model-independent brightness
profiles for data from each occulting edge is discussed, along with the
tomographic combination of these profiles to build an image of the source star.
Finally we demonstrate the technique with recovered images of the {\alpha}
Centauri binary system and the circumstellar environment of the evolved
late-type giant star, Mira.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, Accepted by MNRA
- …