Global N-body Simulation of Gap Edge Structures Created by Perturbations from a Small Satellite Embedded in Saturn's Rings
Observations by the Voyager and Cassini spacecrafts have revealed various striking features of the gap structure in Saturn's ring, such as the density waves, sharp edge, and vertical wall structure. In order to explain these features in a single simulation, we perform a high-resolution (N~10^6-...
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Zusammenfassung: | Observations by the Voyager and Cassini spacecrafts have revealed various
striking features of the gap structure in Saturn's ring, such as the density
waves, sharp edge, and vertical wall structure. In order to explain these
features in a single simulation, we perform a high-resolution (N~10^6-10^7)
global full N-body simulation of gap formation by an embedded satellite
considering gravitational interactions and inelastic collisions among all ring
particles and the satellite, while these features have been mostly investigated
separately with different theoretical approaches: the streamline models, 1D
diffusion models, and local N-body simulation. As a first attempt of a series
of papers, we here focus on the gap formation by separating satellite migration
with fixing the satellite orbit in a Keplerian circular orbit. We reveal how
the striking gap features - the density waves, sharp edge, and vertical wall
structure - are simultaneously formed by an interplay of the satellite-ring and
ring particle-particle interactions. In particular, we propose a new mechanism
to quantitatively explain the creation of the vertical wall structure at the
gap edge. Inelastic collisions between ring particles damp their eccentricity
excited by the satellite's perturbations to enhance the surface density at the
gap edge, making its sharp edges more pronounced. We find the eccentricity
damping process inevitably raises the vertical wall structures the most
effectively in the second epicycle waves. Particle-particle collisions
generally convert their lateral epicyclic motion into vertical motion. Because
the excited epicyclic motion is the greatest near the ring edge and the
epicycle motions are aligned in the first waves, the conversion is the most
efficient in the gap edge of the second waves and the wall height is scaled by
the satellite Hill radius, which are consistent with the observations. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2403.03012 |