Exploring the Physical World

Saturn’s Atmosphere Proves Deep, Its Rings Young

As Cassini reached its final act, Weizmann Institute of Science researchers took part in the last phase of the 20-year mission

Saturn

Cassini’s view from orbit around Saturn on Jan. 2, 2010. This natural-color view is a composite of images taken in visible light with the spacecraft’s narrow-angle camera at a distance of approximately 1.4 million mi (2.3 million km) from Saturn. Source: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

REHOVOT, ISRAEL—January 17, 2019—Grand Finale was the official name of Cassini’s last act: a risky orbit between Saturn’s rings and atmosphere in a daring attempt to view the planet up close, just before going down in flames. Prof. Yohai Kaspi and Dr. Eli Galanti of the Weizmann Institute of Science’s Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences led one of the studies on Cassini’s final mission: revealing the depth of Saturn’s jet streams ‒ the strongest measured in the Solar System, with winds of up to 1,500 km (about 932 mi) per hour ‒ and found them to reach a depth of around 9,000 km (about 5,600 mi). Teaming up with research partners in Italy and the U.S., their study also helped reveal the age of the planet’s iconic rings. The findings of these studies were published in Science.

Cassini was one of the more successful planetary missions, orbiting and returning information on Saturn and its moons for the last 20 years. But as the mission was approaching its end, scientists decided to end Cassini’s life with a non-circular orbit swinging very close to the planet, followed by a final plunge into the planet’s gaseous mass. Before joining the Cassini team, Prof. Kaspi and Dr. Galanti were part of NASA’s Juno team, which had employed a similar orbit to produce the most reliable measurements yet of Jupiter’s atmospheric depth.

The Cassini scientists thought it would be possible to do the same for Saturn; Prof. Kaspi and Dr. Galanti were called in to apply their methodology to the Saturn measurements. Prof. Kaspi describes the challenge: “We detect small variations in the gravity field as the craft orbits Saturn, and translate these into the atmospheric wind that produces them. There was no guarantee it would work for Saturn, as the gravity signal on Saturn is more difficult to interpret than what we had on Jupiter. We discovered that not only did it work for both planets, but that same physical processes control the depth of the flows on these two planets.”

Prof. Yohai Kaspi and Dr. Eli Galanti

L-R: Prof. Yohai Kaspi and Dr. Eli Galanti

To calculate the depth of the winds, the gravity measurements taken by Cassini were analyzed with the theoretical model developed by the Weizmann researchers. Dr. Galanti says, “We also teamed up with a second group investigating the internal structure of the planet. Together, we calculated that the depth of the atmosphere is up to around 9,000 km. That is three times deeper than that of Jupiter. We also found that, just as on Jupiter, a strong internal magnetic field is what limits the depth of this layer of the atmosphere. Our theory ‘worked’ twice, which provides strong support for its validity.”

In the same study, the researchers analyzed the Grand Finale data from Saturn’s rings, finding that they are a mere 10-100 million years old. That is quite recent in the 4.5-billion-year history of the Solar System: the planet in the night sky at the time of the first dinosaurs was, apparently, without the rings we know today.

Prof. Yohai Kaspi’s research is supported by the André Deloro Institute for Space and Optics Research and the Schwartz/Reisman Institute for Theoretical Physics.

Exploring the Physical World

Saturn’s Atmosphere Proves Deep, Its Rings Young

As Cassini reached its final act, Weizmann Institute of Science researchers took part in the last phase of the 20-year mission

• TAGS: Astrophysics , Physics

Saturn

Cassini’s view from orbit around Saturn on Jan. 2, 2010. This natural-color view is a composite of images taken in visible light with the spacecraft’s narrow-angle camera at a distance of approximately 1.4 million mi (2.3 million km) from Saturn. Source: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

REHOVOT, ISRAEL—January 17, 2019—Grand Finale was the official name of Cassini’s last act: a risky orbit between Saturn’s rings and atmosphere in a daring attempt to view the planet up close, just before going down in flames. Prof. Yohai Kaspi and Dr. Eli Galanti of the Weizmann Institute of Science’s Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences led one of the studies on Cassini’s final mission: revealing the depth of Saturn’s jet streams ‒ the strongest measured in the Solar System, with winds of up to 1,500 km (about 932 mi) per hour ‒ and found them to reach a depth of around 9,000 km (about 5,600 mi). Teaming up with research partners in Italy and the U.S., their study also helped reveal the age of the planet’s iconic rings. The findings of these studies were published in Science.

Cassini was one of the more successful planetary missions, orbiting and returning information on Saturn and its moons for the last 20 years. But as the mission was approaching its end, scientists decided to end Cassini’s life with a non-circular orbit swinging very close to the planet, followed by a final plunge into the planet’s gaseous mass. Before joining the Cassini team, Prof. Kaspi and Dr. Galanti were part of NASA’s Juno team, which had employed a similar orbit to produce the most reliable measurements yet of Jupiter’s atmospheric depth.

The Cassini scientists thought it would be possible to do the same for Saturn; Prof. Kaspi and Dr. Galanti were called in to apply their methodology to the Saturn measurements. Prof. Kaspi describes the challenge: “We detect small variations in the gravity field as the craft orbits Saturn, and translate these into the atmospheric wind that produces them. There was no guarantee it would work for Saturn, as the gravity signal on Saturn is more difficult to interpret than what we had on Jupiter. We discovered that not only did it work for both planets, but that same physical processes control the depth of the flows on these two planets.”

Prof. Yohai Kaspi and Dr. Eli Galanti

L-R: Prof. Yohai Kaspi and Dr. Eli Galanti

To calculate the depth of the winds, the gravity measurements taken by Cassini were analyzed with the theoretical model developed by the Weizmann researchers. Dr. Galanti says, “We also teamed up with a second group investigating the internal structure of the planet. Together, we calculated that the depth of the atmosphere is up to around 9,000 km. That is three times deeper than that of Jupiter. We also found that, just as on Jupiter, a strong internal magnetic field is what limits the depth of this layer of the atmosphere. Our theory ‘worked’ twice, which provides strong support for its validity.”

In the same study, the researchers analyzed the Grand Finale data from Saturn’s rings, finding that they are a mere 10-100 million years old. That is quite recent in the 4.5-billion-year history of the Solar System: the planet in the night sky at the time of the first dinosaurs was, apparently, without the rings we know today.

Prof. Yohai Kaspi’s research is supported by the André Deloro Institute for Space and Optics Research and the Schwartz/Reisman Institute for Theoretical Physics.