Search Publications

Modulation of Saturn's radio clock by solar wind speed
DOI: 10.1038/nature06237 Bibcode: 2007Natur.450..265Z

Lamy, Laurent; Prangé, Renée; Cecconi, Baptiste +2 more

The internal rotation rates of the giant planets can be estimated by cloud motions, but such an approach is not very precise because absolute wind speeds are not known a priori and depend on latitude: periodicities in the radio emissions, thought to be tied to the internal planetary magnetic field, are used instead. Saturn, despite an apparently a…

2007 Nature
Cassini 65
A belt of moonlets in Saturn's A ring
DOI: 10.1038/nature06224 Bibcode: 2007Natur.449.1019S

Schmidt, Jürgen; Sremčević, Miodrag; Albers, Nicole +3 more

The origin and evolution of planetary rings is one of the prominent unsolved problems of planetary sciences, with direct implications for planet-forming processes in pre-planetary disks. The recent detection of four propeller-shaped features in Saturn's A ring proved the presence of large boulder-sized moonlets in the rings. Their existence favour…

2007 Nature
Cassini 62
Surface composition of Hyperion
DOI: 10.1038/nature05948 Bibcode: 2007Natur.448...54C

Sotin, C.; Brown, R. H.; Baines, K. H. +28 more

Hyperion, Saturn's eighth largest icy satellite, is a body of irregular shape in a state of chaotic rotation. The surface is segregated into two distinct units. A spatially dominant high-albedo unit having the strong signature of H2O ice contrasts with a unit that is about a factor of four lower in albedo and is found mostly in the bott…

2007 Nature
Cassini 58
An unexpected cooling effect in Saturn's upper atmosphere
DOI: 10.1038/nature05518 Bibcode: 2007Natur.445..399S

Millward, G. H.; Miller, S.; Smith, C. G. A. +2 more

The upper atmospheres of the four Solar System giant planets exhibit high temperatures that cannot be explained by the absorption of sunlight. In the case of Saturn the temperatures predicted by models of solar heating are ~200K, compared to temperatures of ~400K observed independently in the polar regions and at 30° latitude. This unexplained `en…

2007 Nature
Cassini 52
Tethys and Dione as sources of outward-flowing plasma in Saturn's magnetosphere
DOI: 10.1038/nature05906 Bibcode: 2007Natur.447..833B

André, N.; Coates, A. J.; Dougherty, M. K. +4 more

Rotating at over twice the angular speed of Earth, Saturn imposes a rapid spin on its magnetosphere. As a result, cold, dense plasma is believed to be flung outward from the inner magnetosphere by centrifugal force and replaced by hotter, more tenuous plasma from the outer magnetosphere. The centrifugal interchange of plasmas in rotating magnetosp…

2007 Nature
Cassini 50
Planetary science: Inside Enceladus
DOI: 10.1038/445376b Bibcode: 2007Natur.445..376S

Spencer, John; Grinspoon, David

Chemical analysis of a plume emanating from near the south pole of Enceladus indicates that the interior of this saturnian moon is hot. Could it have been hot enough for complex organic molecules to be made?

2007 Nature
Cassini 11
Planetary science: Titan's lost seas found
DOI: 10.1038/445029a Bibcode: 2007Natur.445...29S

Sotin, Christophe

When the Cassini spacecraft found no methane ocean swathing Saturn's moon Titan, it was a blow to proponents of an Earth-like world. The discovery of northern lakes on Titan gives them reason for cheer.

2007 Nature
Cassini 6
Planetary science: Hyperion the sponge
DOI: 10.1038/448037a Bibcode: 2007Natur.448...37W

Webb, Richard

2007 Nature
Cassini 0