Why are dense planetary rings only found between 8 AU and 20 AU? [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1502.07696


The recent discovery of dense rings around the Centaur Chariklo (and possibly Chiron) reveals that complete dense planetary rings are not only found around Saturn and Uranus, but also around small bodies orbiting in the vicinity of those giant planets. This report examines whether there could be a physical process that would make rings more likely to form or persist in this particular part of the outer Solar System. Specifically, the ring material orbiting Saturn and Uranus appears to be much weaker than the material forming the innermost moons of Jupiter and Neptune. Also, the mean surface temperatures of Saturn’s, Uranus’ and Chariklo’s rings are all close to 70 K. Thus the restricted distribution of dense rings in our Solar System may arise because icy materials are particularly weak around that temperature.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. Hedman
Fri, 27 Feb 15
56/60

Comments: 4 Pages, 1 Figure, Accepted for publication in APJL