Examining Uranus' zeta ring in Voyager 2 Wide-Angle-Camera Observations: Quantifying the Ring's Structure in 1986 and its Modifications prior to the Year 2007 [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2305.07190


The zeta ring is the innermost component of the Uranian ring system. It is of scientific interest because its morphology changed significantly between the Voyager 2 encounter in 1986 and subsequent Earth-based observations around 2007. It is also of practical interest because some Uranus mission concepts have the spacecraft pass through the inner flank of this ring. Recent re-examinations of the Voyager 2 images have revealed additional information about this ring that provide a more complete picture of the ring’s radial brightness profile and phase function. These data reveal that this ring’s brightness varies with phase angle in a manner similar to other tenuous rings, consistent with it being composed primarily of sub-millimeter-sized particles. The total cross section of particles within this ring can also be estimated from these data, but translating that number into the actual risk to a spacecraft flying through this region depends on a number of model-dependent parameters. Fortunately, comparisons with Saturn’s G and D rings allows the zeta-ring’s particle number density to be compared with regions previously encountered by the Voyager and Cassini spacecraft. Finally, these data indicate that the observed changes in the zeta-ring’s structure between 1986 and 2007 are primarily due to a substantial increase in the amount of dust at distances between 38,000 km and 40,000 km from Uranus’ center.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. Hedman, I. Regan, T. Becker, et. al.
Mon, 15 May 23
23/53

Comments: 28 Pages, 12 Figures, Accepted for publication in PSJ