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Dust grains fall from Saturn's D-ring into its equatorial upper atmosphere
DOI: 10.1126/science.aat2236 Bibcode: 2018Sci...362.2236M

Persoon, A. M.; Kurth, W. S.; Mitchell, D. G. +12 more

The sizes of Saturn's ring particles range from meters (boulders) to nanometers (dust). Determination of the rings' ages depends on loss processes, including the transport of dust into Saturn's atmosphere. During the Grand Finale orbits of the Cassini spacecraft, its instruments measured tiny dust grains that compose the innermost D-ring of Saturn…

2018 Science
Cassini 36
A radiation belt of energetic protons located between Saturn and its rings
DOI: 10.1126/science.aat1962 Bibcode: 2018Sci...362.1962R

Livi, S.; Krupp, N.; Jones, G. H. +21 more

Saturn has a sufficiently strong dipole magnetic field to trap high-energy charged particles and form radiation belts, which have been observed outside its rings. Whether stable radiation belts exist near the planet and inward of the rings was previously unknown. The Cassini spacecraft's Magnetosphere Imaging Instrument obtained measurements of a …

2018 Science
Cassini 28
India plans to land near moon's south pole
DOI: 10.1126/science.359.6375.503 Bibcode: 2018Sci...359..503B

Bagla, Pallava

Sometime this summer, an Indian spacecraft orbiting over the moon's far side will release a lander. The craft will ease to a soft landing just after lunar sunrise on an ancient, table-flat plain about 600 kilometers from the south pole. There, it will unleash a rover into territory never before explored at the surface. That's the ambitious vision …

2018 Science
Chandrayaan-1 6
Data trove helps pin down the shape of the Milky Way
DOI: 10.1126/science.360.6387.363 Bibcode: 2018Sci...360..363C

Clery, Daniel

On 25 April, hundreds of astronomers around the world got their hands on one of the biggest data dumps in the history of astronomy: the exact positions, motions, brightnesses, and colors of 1.3 billion stars in and around the Milky Way, gathered during the first 2 years of operation by the European Space Agency's €750 million Gaia satellite, launc…

2018 Science
Gaia 1
Fast stars point to supernovae, black holes
DOI: 10.1126/science.360.6389.589 Bibcode: 2018Sci...360..589S

Sokol, Joshua

On 25 April, the European Space Agency released a data set gathered by the Gaia satellite containing the motions, and much more, of 1.3 billion stars. Astronomers have immediately sifted the data for fast-moving stars. They are prized as forensic tools: When rewound, their trajectories point back to the violent events that launched them. Last week…

2018 Science
Gaia 0