A multilayer model for thermal infrared emission of Saturn’s rings. III: Thermal inertia inferred from Cassini CIRS

► The thermal inertias of Saturn’s ring particles are 11–20 in MKS units. ► The apparent thermal inertia increases with increasing solar phase angle. ► The thermal inertias of small fast rotators are 27–77 in MKS units. ► The thermal inertias of large slow rotators are 5–9 in MKS units. The thermal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962) N.Y. 1962), 2011-09, Vol.215 (1), p.107-127
Hauptverfasser: Morishima, Ryuji, Spilker, Linda, Ohtsuki, Keiji
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:► The thermal inertias of Saturn’s ring particles are 11–20 in MKS units. ► The apparent thermal inertia increases with increasing solar phase angle. ► The thermal inertias of small fast rotators are 27–77 in MKS units. ► The thermal inertias of large slow rotators are 5–9 in MKS units. The thermal inertia values of Saturn’s main rings (the A, B, and C rings and the Cassini division) are derived by applying our thermal model to azimuthally scanned spectra taken by the Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS). Model fits show the thermal inertia of ring particles to be 16, 13, 20, and 11 J m −2 K −1 s −1/2 for the A, B, and C rings, and the Cassini division, respectively. However, there are systematic deviations between modeled and observed temperatures in Saturn’s shadow depending on solar phase angle, and these deviations indicate that the apparent thermal inertia increases with solar phase angle. This dependence is likely to be explained if large slowly spinning particles have lower thermal inertia values than those for small fast spinning particles because the thermal emission of slow rotators is relatively stronger than that of fast rotators at low phase and vise versa. Additional parameter fits, which assume that slow and fast rotators have different thermal inertia values, show the derived thermal inertia values of slow (fast) rotators to be 8 (77), 8 (27), 9 (34), 5 (55) J m −2 K −1 s −1/2 for the A, B, and C rings, and the Cassini division, respectively. The values for fast rotators are still much smaller than those for solid ice with no porosity. Thus, fast rotators are likely to have surface regolith layers, but these may not be as fluffy as those for slow rotators, probably because the capability of holding regolith particles is limited for fast rotators due to the strong centrifugal force on surfaces of fast rotators. Other additional parameter fits, in which radii of fast rotators are varied, indicate that particles less than ∼1 cm should not occupy more than roughly a half of the cross section for the A, B, and C rings.
ISSN:0019-1035
1090-2643
DOI:10.1016/j.icarus.2011.06.042