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Rings of Uranus: A Review of Occultation Results

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

James L. Elliot*
Affiliation:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Extract

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Since their discovery in 1977 (Elliot 1979), the dark, narrow rings of Uranus have intrigued dynamicists. The main enigma has been how the rings can remain so narrow - only a few km wide - when particle collisions and the Poynting-Robertson effect should cause the particles to disperse. The Uranian rings have posed other problems as well, and have proved to be a unique system for developing dynamical models of rings. The reason for this theoretical interest is the high precision and time coverage of the data available from occultation observations. With occultations we obtain a spatial resolution of 1 km in the position of ring segments and a resolution of 4 km in their structural details. These high-resolution data are available sufficiently often to be useful for dynamical purposes - at the rate of 1-2 events per year. This spatial resolution is somewhat better than that obtained by Voyager imaging of Jupiter’s and Saturn’s rings (Owen et al. 1979; Smith et al. 1981). Ground-based images of the Uranian rings, obtained by Matthews, Nicholson, and Neugebauer (1981), have a spatial resolution of ~50,000 km. Although unable to resolve individual rings, these data have established the mean geometric albedo of the rings at 0.030 ± 0.005.

Type
Present Knowledge of Uranus
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1982

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