Deciphering The Embedded Wave In Saturn'S Maxwell Ringlet

Keywords

interior; Occultations; Planetary rings; Resonances; rings; rings; Saturn; Saturn

Abstract

The eccentric Maxwell ringlet in Saturn's C ring is home to a prominent wavelike structure that varies strongly and systematically with true anomaly, as revealed by nearly a decade of high-SNR Cassini occultation observations. Using a simple linear “accordion” model to compensate for the compression and expansion of the ringlet and the wave, we derive a mean optical depth profile for the ringlet and a set of rescaled, background-subtracted radial wave profiles. We use wavelet analysis to identify the wave as a 2-armed trailing spiral, consistent with a density wave driven by an m=2 outer Lindblad resonance (OLR), with a pattern speed Ωp=1769.17° d−1 and a corresponding resonance radius ares=87530.0 km. Estimates of the surface mass density of the Maxwell ringlet range from a mean value of 110.25em0exg0.25em0excm−2 derived from the self-gravity model to 5−12gcm−2, as inferred from the wave's phase profile and a theoretical dispersion relation. The corresponding opacity is about 0.120.25em0excm20.25em0exg−1, comparable to several plateaus in the outer C ring (Hedman, M.N., Nicholson, P.D. [2014]. Mont. Not. Roy. Astron. Soc. 444, 1369–1388). A linear density wave model using the derived wave phase profile nicely matches the wave's amplitude, wavelength, and phase in most of our observations, confirming the accuracy of the pattern speed and demonstrating the wave's coherence over a period of 8 years. However, the linear model fails to reproduce the narrow, spike-like structures that are prominent in the observed optical depth profiles. Using a symplectic N-body streamline-based dynamical code (Hahn, J.M., Spitale, J.N. [2013]. Astrophys. J. 772, 122), we simulate analogs of the Maxwell ringlet, modeled as an eccentric ringlet with an embedded wave driven by a fictitious satellite with an OLR located within the ring. The simulations reproduce many of the features of the actual observations, including strongly asymmetric peaks and troughs in the inward-propagating density wave. We argue that the Maxwell ringlet wave is generated by a sectoral normal-mode oscillation inside Saturn with ℓ=m=2, similar to other planetary internal modes that have been inferred from density waves observed in Saturn's C ring (Hedman, M.N., Nicholson, P.D. [2013]. Astron. J. 146, 12; Hedman, M.N., Nicholson, P.D. [2014]. Mont. Not. Roy. Astron. Soc. 444, 1369–1388). Our identification of a third m=2 mode associated with saturnian internal oscillations supports the suggestions of mode splitting by Fuller et al. (Fuller, J., Lai, D., Storch, N.I. [2014]. Icarus 231, 34–50) and Fuller (Fuller, J. [2014]. Icarus 242, 283–296). The fitted amplitude of the wave, if it is interpreted as driven by the ℓ=m=2 f-mode, implies a radial amplitude at the 1 bar level of ∼ 50 cm, according to the models of Marley and Porco (Marley, M.S., Porco, C.C. [1993]. Icarus 106, 508).

Publication Date

11-15-2016

Publication Title

Icarus

Volume

279

Number of Pages

62-77

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2015.08.020

Socpus ID

84940777839 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/84940777839

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS