What are Saturn's rings made of and how are they formed?

  • Thread starter Thread starter billiards
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Rings Saturn
AI Thread Summary
Saturn's rings are formed primarily due to the gravitational forces exerted by the planet, which can tear apart smaller icy moons that venture too close, a phenomenon known as tidal forces. These rings are not permanent and will eventually dissipate over time. The composition of the rings consists of various sizes of icy particles, ranging from boulders to snowflakes, primarily made up of dirty ice. Enceladus, one of Saturn's moons, plays a significant role in maintaining the rings by erupting water, which contributes material to the E-ring, Saturn's largest ring.
billiards
Messages
765
Reaction score
16
I know this isn't really 'earth sciences' but there is no planetary forum that I am aware of. Anyway, why does Saturn have rings, and what are they made of?

I read somewhere that Enceladus is the major souce of Saturn's largest ring, the 'E-ring'. What does that mean?

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/media/cassini-072905.html
 
Earth sciences news on Phys.org
Sorry no answer but you could try Astrophysics, there is a thread ongoing about Saturn right there. The active moderaters will probably be kind enough to move your thread.
 
Saturn has rings likely because one of its smaller icy moons got too close and was torn apart. This is likely not an uncommon occurrence in some planet's histories. The rings are not permanent structures, and will eventually disappear.

The rings are made of chunks of dirty ice from boulders down to snowflakes.

Enceladus has volcanos that erupt with water, showering the orbit of Saturn with it. This feeds the rings.

Here is a Astronomy forum: http://astro.forumup.co.uk/?mforum=astro
 
Thanks Dave that makes sense. But how did the moons get torn apart, tidal forces I presume?
 
billiards said:
Thanks Dave that makes sense. But how did the moons get torn apart, tidal forces I presume?

Yes. The rings are within Saturn's http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roche_limit" .
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Saturn has rings because its gravitational pull pulled in both large and small objects. Over time it built up to the rings you see now
 
Note that this thread is two years old...

...and that answer is wrong!
 

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
4K
Replies
4
Views
5K
Replies
39
Views
9K
Replies
22
Views
3K
2
Replies
96
Views
10K
Back
Top