Friday, December 14, 2007

Saturn



Teh rings R as old as Simels. Who knew?

Saturn's rings older than first thought?
LOS ANGELES - Saturn's shimmering rings may be as old as the solar system, scientists said Wednesday, debunking earlier theories that the rings were formed during the dinosaur age.

Astronomers had thought Saturn's rings were cosmically young, likely born some 100 million years ago from leftovers of a meteoric collision with a moon, based on data by NASA's Voyager spacecraft in the 1970s.

However, new data from the orbiting international Cassini spacecraft suggest the rings existed as far back as 4.5 billion years ago, roughly the same time the sun and planets formed. The probe also found evidence that ring particles are constantly shattering and regrouping to form new rings.

"Recycling allows the rings to be as old as the solar system although continually changing," said Larry Esposito, a Cassini scientist from the University of Colorado.
And they recycle! excellent.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Teh rings R as old as Simels. Who knew?

Nuh uh.

Simels *is* teh big bang.

Diint U know?

flory

four legs good said...

Oh noes!

I stand corrected.

Anonymous said...

I looked at Saturn last night and it didn't look anything like that in the backyard 'scope

Backyard Astronomer