Perhaps not coincidentally, both blue rings are associated with small moons. Astronomers suspect the rings owe their blue color to subtle forces acting on dust in the rings that allow smaller particles to survive while larger ones are recaptured by a moon.
"The outer ring of Saturn is blue and has [the moon] Enceledus right smack at its brightest spot, and Uranus is strikingly similar, with its blue ring right on top of [the moon] Mab's orbit," says Imke de Pater, who is an astronomer at the University of California, Berkeley, and a co-author of the Science paper. "The blue color says that this ring is predominantly submicron-sized material, much smaller than the material in most other rings, which appear red."
De Pater and her co-authors believe the similarity between the outer rings implies an in kind explanation for their blue color. Many other scientists have ascribed Saturn's blue ring to the small dust, gas and ice particles spewed into Encedadus' orbit by newly discovered plumes on that moon's surface. But that is unlikely to be the case with Mab, a small, dead, rocky ball, about 15 miles across-one-twentieth the diameter of Enceladus.
"We know now that there is at least one way to make a blue ring that doesn't involve plumes, because Mab is surely too small to be internally active," says Mark Showalter of the SETI Institute in Mountain View, Calif., another co-author of the Science paper. He and astronomer Jack Lissauer of NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif., discovered Mab in Hubble Space Telescope images in 2003.
Funding for this research came from the National Science Foundation, NASA and the Department of Energy.
For more information, see the University of California, Berkeley, news release. Media Contacts: Robert Sanders, University of California, Berkeley, (510) 643-6998, rsanders@berkeley.edu M. Waldrop, NSF, (703) 292-7752, mwaldrop@nsf.gov
NSF-PR 06-057
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