#Saturn’s shepherd moon Daphnis makes waves

The wavemaker moon, Daphnis, is featured in this view taken by the Cassini spacecraft Jan. 16. It is the closest picture of Daphnis ever taken. Each pixel measures about 551 feet (168 meters) across. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

NASA’s Cassini spacecraft has captured the first close-up view of Daphnis, one of at least 62 moons found orbiting Saturn, plowing a path through the planet’s icy rings and raising waves in its wake.

The image taken by Cassini’s narrow-angle camera Jan. 16 is the best view ever taken of Daphnis, a football-shaped object carving a gap in one of Saturn’s outer rings. The spacecraft was about 17,000 miles (28,000 kilometers) from Daphnis at the time.

The moon was discovered by Cassini scientists in 2005, confirming suspicions that something was hiding inside the Keeler Gap, one of several open lanes in Saturn’s discontinuous ring system.

The moon measures around 5 miles (8 kilometers) in diameter, and the Keeler Gap stretches around 26 miles (42 kilometers) wide, a relatively narrow opening in which Daphnis brushes up against the ice particles making up the walls of the gap.

Material at the inner edge of the gap orbit Saturn at slightly faster speeds than Daphnis, fostering waves that appear ahead of the moon’s path. The waves trail Daphnis at the outer margins of the Keeler Gap, where ice particles move slower relative to Saturn.

Daphnis orbits with a slight inclination, making the moon oscillate above and below the ring plane and dragging icy material along with it. A longer-range picture taken by Cassini in 2009 shows Daphnis casting an elongated shadow across Saturn’s rings, along with the vertical extent of the waves created by the moon’s passage.

Vertical structures created by Saturn’s small moon Daphnis cast long shadows across the rings in this dramatic image taken by Cassini on June 8, 2009, at a distance of 414,000 miles (666,000 kilometers). Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

The June 2009 observation was aided by Saturn’s equinox, when the sun shines in line with the planet’s ring plane. Saturn has an equinox once every half-year on the planet, equivalent to approximately 15 Earth years.

After its discovery in 2005, Daphnis was named for a pastoral poet, shepherd and pipes player in Greek mythology, according to NASA. Daphnis was the son of Hermes, brother of Pan and a descendant of the Titans, tying the name to other members of the Saturn system.

Scientists are already analyzing the new image of Daphnis and identifying broad surface features on the moon.

“Like a couple of Saturn’s other small ring moons, Atlas and Pan, Daphnis appears to have a narrow ridge around its equator and a fairly smooth mantle of material on its surface — likely an accumulation of fine particles from the rings,” NASA wrote in a press release accompanying the new image. “A few craters are obvious at this resolution. An additional ridge can be seen further north that runs parallel to the equatorial band.”

Scientists say the grainy appearance observed in several segments of the A ring adjacent to the gap occupied by Daphnis could mark regions where ice particles are clumping together.

“In comparison to the otherwise sharp edges of the Keeler Gap, the wave peak in the gap edge at left has a softened appearance,” NASA said. “This is possibly due to the movement of fine ring particles being spread out into the gap following Daphnis’ last close approach to that edge on a previous orbit.”

This illustration created by Kevin Gill, a software engineer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, shows Daphne’s effect on the edges of the Keeler Gap. Credit: Kevin Gill

“A faint, narrow tendril of ring material follows just behind Daphnis (to its left),” NASA said. “This may have resulted from a moment when Daphnis drew a packet of material out of the ring, and now that packet is spreading itself out.”

Cassini is in the final year of its mission, after swinging into a “ring-grazing” orbit Nov. 30 that takes the probe just outside Saturn’s outer F ring, around 57,000 miles (91,000 kilometers) from the planet’s cloud tops.

The spacecraft, on station around Saturn since 2004, will stay in the ring-grazing orbit three more months, completing 20 laps around the planet before the mission’s final flyby of the large haze-enshrouded moon Titan on April 22 nudges Cassini on a trajectory between Saturn’s cloud tops and its innermost ring.

Running low on fuel, Cassini will make 22 trips through the 1,500-mile (2,400-kilometer) ring gap just above Saturn from April 26 until Sept. 15, when the spacecraft will make a final destructive plunge into the planet, transmitting data on its atmosphere until its signal is lost.

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Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

from Spaceflight Now bit.ly/2iIadDH

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