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an explanation of Saturn's rings



 
 
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  #1  
Old July 2nd 04, 03:43 AM
Bob Jenkins
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Default an explanation of Saturn's rings

Hah! I bet I have an explanation of Saturn's rings, including the
ripples and braids. It's just a four-body resonance strange
attractor. There's Saturn. Then there's two very small moons close
together in resonance (7:8 or such). Those moons close together form
a gravitational basin, sort of like the Lagrange points set up by
Sun+Jupiter. And there is a bunch of pebble like stuff orbiting the
center of that basin, like marbles in a bowl. Like the Trojan
asteroids in the Sun+Jupiter's lagrange point. Fancier stuff, like
ring particles interacting or something special about Saturn's
oblateness, wouldn't be relevant.

If that's right, I should have no trouble throwing together a
simulation of it with my orbit applet. I'll try that tonight.
  #4  
Old July 2nd 04, 08:41 AM
Z Zag
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Default an explanation of Saturn's rings

Hah! I bet I have an explanation of Saturn's rings, including the
ripples and braids. It's just a four-body resonance


How about magnetic particles making that symmetry within the ring orbits ?


  #5  
Old July 2nd 04, 08:41 AM
Z Zag
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Posts: n/a
Default an explanation of Saturn's rings

Hah! I bet I have an explanation of Saturn's rings, including the
ripples and braids. It's just a four-body resonance


How about magnetic particles making that symmetry within the ring orbits ?


  #6  
Old July 2nd 04, 09:49 AM
Bob Jenkins
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Default an explanation of Saturn's rings

I tried simulating a massless satellite in a roughtly 5::3 resonance
with a moon orbiting a large planet
(http://burtleburtle.net/bob/physics/rings.html). It's strobe,
showing the planet and moon exactly once per orbit, so the moon
appears to stay still. Since the satellite moves around, you get the
same pattern you'd get if you filled the whole of the satellite's
orbit with tiny particles. If you watch it for awhile, you'll see it
forms braided waves. However, these waves go out to the edge and in
again. It's symmetric if you flip the image along the line connecting
the planet to the moon. The images we're getting back from Saturn
don't show that symmetry. That lack of symmetry rules out all the
purely gravitational things I can think of.
  #7  
Old July 2nd 04, 09:49 AM
Bob Jenkins
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default an explanation of Saturn's rings

I tried simulating a massless satellite in a roughtly 5::3 resonance
with a moon orbiting a large planet
(http://burtleburtle.net/bob/physics/rings.html). It's strobe,
showing the planet and moon exactly once per orbit, so the moon
appears to stay still. Since the satellite moves around, you get the
same pattern you'd get if you filled the whole of the satellite's
orbit with tiny particles. If you watch it for awhile, you'll see it
forms braided waves. However, these waves go out to the edge and in
again. It's symmetric if you flip the image along the line connecting
the planet to the moon. The images we're getting back from Saturn
don't show that symmetry. That lack of symmetry rules out all the
purely gravitational things I can think of.
  #8  
Old July 2nd 04, 09:49 AM
gravity jones
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Posts: n/a
Default an explanation of Saturn's rings

There is a another type of analysis not too much en vogue...that of
thinking about rings being in a location where there is the least
resistence and / or interaction. where a moon sweeps up a region of the
ring well there it goes..a nice hole between rings. All forces and
interactions in the viscinity of where saturn is and what saturn does
and all external forces say where and whe rings should exist no matter
what you arbitarily decide should be the rings origin, Waveyness in the
rings then would have the same general explanation plus the fact that
that rings may also impart their own forces. what i have seen in some
of the pictures coming back is a spiral effect in the rings of globs in
the rings perhaps having enhanced gravity probably due to black body
radiation retention...the same effect has been observed among the
asteroids in asteroid belt. The only explanation for enhanced gravity
of small masses is a new theory of thermodynamics being the actual
cause of gravity (as the effect) such that the sum of energy and the sum
of mass retained by a massive body minus the sum of lost energy and
lost mass over a set period of time will acount for any gravity anomoly
of enhancement. (turns out its not just the anomaly!)

The Thermodynamic Cause of Gravity:
Site Below is due for update and removal of mistakes:

http://www.webspawner.com/users/gravity/index.html

  #9  
Old July 2nd 04, 09:49 AM
gravity jones
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default an explanation of Saturn's rings

There is a another type of analysis not too much en vogue...that of
thinking about rings being in a location where there is the least
resistence and / or interaction. where a moon sweeps up a region of the
ring well there it goes..a nice hole between rings. All forces and
interactions in the viscinity of where saturn is and what saturn does
and all external forces say where and whe rings should exist no matter
what you arbitarily decide should be the rings origin, Waveyness in the
rings then would have the same general explanation plus the fact that
that rings may also impart their own forces. what i have seen in some
of the pictures coming back is a spiral effect in the rings of globs in
the rings perhaps having enhanced gravity probably due to black body
radiation retention...the same effect has been observed among the
asteroids in asteroid belt. The only explanation for enhanced gravity
of small masses is a new theory of thermodynamics being the actual
cause of gravity (as the effect) such that the sum of energy and the sum
of mass retained by a massive body minus the sum of lost energy and
lost mass over a set period of time will acount for any gravity anomoly
of enhancement. (turns out its not just the anomaly!)

The Thermodynamic Cause of Gravity:
Site Below is due for update and removal of mistakes:

http://www.webspawner.com/users/gravity/index.html

  #10  
Old July 3rd 04, 12:37 AM
Darren Garrison
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Posts: n/a
Default an explanation of Saturn's rings

Everybody knows that Saturn's rings are the universe's largest phonograph record, recording God's
explanation of the meaning of life, the universe, and everything, just waiting these past 6000 years
for us to become advanced enough to build The Great Stylus.

 




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