Image Credit: Cassini Imaging Team, SSI, JPL, ESA, NASA
Explanation: How old are Saturn's rings? No one is quite sure. One
possibility is that the rings formed relatively recently in our Solar System's
history, perhaps only about 100 million years ago when a moon-sized object broke up near Saturn.
Evidence for a young ring age includes a basic stability analysis for
rings, and the fact that the rings are so bright and relatively unaffected
by numerous small dark meteor impacts. More recent
evidence, however, raises the possibility that some of Saturn's rings may be
billions of years old and so almost as old as Saturn itself.
Inspection of images by the Saturn-orbiting Cassini spacecraft indicates that
some of Saturn's ring particles temporarily bunch
and collide, effectively recycling ring particles by
bringing fresh bright ices to the surface. Seen here, Saturn's
rings were imaged in their true colors by the robotic Cassini
in late October. Icy bright Tethys, a moon of Saturn
likely brightened by a sandblasting rain of ice from
sister moon Enceladus, is visible in front of the
darker rings.
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