October 7, 2009 4:32 AM

NASA Telescope Spots Ring around Saturn

(AP)  The Spitzer Space Telescope has discovered the biggest but never-before-seen ring around the planet Saturn, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory announced late Tuesday.

The thin array of ice and dust particles lies at the far reaches of the Saturnian system and its orbit is tilted 27 degrees from the planet's main ring plane, the laboratory said.

JPL spokeswoman Whitney Clavin said the ring is very diffuse and doesn't reflect much visible light but the infrared Spitzer telescope was able to detect it.

Although the ring dust is very cold - minus 316 degrees Fahrenheit - it shines with thermal radiation.

No one had looked at its location with an infrared instrument until now, Clavin said.

The bulk of the ring material starts about 3.7 million miles from the planet and extends outward about another 7.4 million miles.

The newly found ring is so huge it would take 1 billion Earths to fill it, JPL said.

Before the discovery Saturn was known to have seven main rings named A through E and several faint unnamed rings.

A paper on the discovery was to be published online Wednesday by the journal Nature.

"This is one supersized ring," said one of the authors, Anne Verbiscer, an astronomer at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. Her co-authors are Douglas Hamilton of the University of Maryland, College Park, and Michael Skrutskie, also of the University of Virginia.

Saturn's moon Phoebe orbits within the ring and is believed to be the source of the material.

The ring also may answer the riddle of another moon, Iapetus, which has a bright side and a very dark side.

The ring circles in the same direction as Phoebe, while Iapetus, the other rings and most of Saturn's other moons go the opposite way. Scientists think material from the outer ring moves inward and slams into Iapetus.

"Astronomers have long suspected that there is a connection between Saturn's outer moon Phoebe and the dark material on Iapetus," said Hamilton. "This new ring provides convincing evidence of that relationship."

The Spitzer mission, launched in 2003, is managed by JPL in Pasadena. Spitzer is 66 million miles from Earth in orbit around the sun.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by cs4466 October 7, 2009 11:26 AM EDT
Saturn has a ring? Didn't we learn this in 2nd grade?
by missme4 October 7, 2009 10:33 AM EDT


Did you even bother to read the article, or did you decide to leap directly into "Look at me, I'm a moron!" mode?
Reply to this comment
by willow013 October 7, 2009 11:38 AM EDT
cs4466: People like missme4 wouldn't even understand the article if they did read it..I was really happy that the Hubble was repaired and the lifespan increased....The photographs returned by The Spitzer and the Hubble are incredible!!!!
by Constitionalist October 7, 2009 9:15 AM EDT
Check out the NASA JPL website. Pretty much carbon copy.
Reply to this comment
by rf35 October 7, 2009 7:31 AM EDT
I just saw several articles from various international sources that indicate the ring is actually centered around Phoebe, not Saturn itself. In other words, it's the moon's ring.
Reply to this comment
by missme4 October 7, 2009 10:33 AM EDT
Saturn has a ring? Didn't we learn this in 2nd grade?
by nordeck52 October 7, 2009 10:38 PM EDT
by missme4 October 7, 2009 10:33 AM EDT
Saturn has a ring? Didn't we learn this in 2nd grade?
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Ignorant much, they discovered a NEW ring around Saturn. Learn to read.
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