Saturn and its moons are the second example of a mini-solar system within the big one. For thousands of years, Saturn was thought to be the outer limit of the Solar System, and has its own associations because of that, but for today I want to concentrate on the whole system of Saturn, with moons, rings and magnetosphere all included, rather than the planet itself.
Saturn has a prodigious number of moons, the count sometimes exceeding Jupiter’s. This is because of the Titius-Bode series. As you go further out, the orbits of the planets get more widely separated, meaning that a planet of the same mass has a longer gravitational reach over its surroundings. Saturn is of course considerably less massive than Jupiter, but its Hill Sphere, the region where its gravity is dominant, is bigger than Jupiter’s, at 1025 radii compared to Jupiter’s 687. Working this out in kilometres, Jupiter’s has a diameter of 96 million kilometres and Saturn’s is 119 million. Against this is the fact that the system is less cluttered out by Saturn than it is near Jupiter, with the asteroid belt being near the larger planet. Saturn has eighty-three moons not including the ones which form part of the rings, compared to Jupiter’s eighty. There was a point when Saturn’s moon count far exceeded Jupiter’s, but this seems to be over. The Hill Spheres are nowhere near each other and there is no competition between the two in this way. Unlike the magnetospheres.
When Voyager 2 was on its way to Saturn, it encountered Jupiter’s magnetotail in February 1981, which may indicate that the tail is forked. It did so again in May that year by which time it was nine-tenths of the way there, or around eighty million kilometres from Saturn. Saturn can even be within Jupiter’s magnetotail at times. As far as Saturn’s magnetosphere is concerned, all its moons out to Titan orbit entirely within it. Titan itself is very close to the edge and passes in and out of it, spending about a fifth of its time within. It’s surrounded by a doughnut of hydrogen extending inwards to Rhea, which is the second-largest moon. The bow shock is somewhat further out and extends north and south of the planet for at least thirty radii. Sunward it extends for almost two million kilometres. This means that of the large moons, only Iapetus and Phoebe orbit outside it entirely. As well as the neutral hydrogen torus around the orbit of Titan, there’s an inner torus of rarefied plasma of ionised hydrogen and oxygen, which effectively means protons and oxygen ions, whose outer diameter is about 400 000 kilometres. At the edge of this torus the temperature is over 400 million degrees C, but it should be born in mind that Earth’s thermosphere is 2 500°C and the Sun’s atmosphere is over a million Kelvin, which is hot but didn’t destroy the probe recently sent there. Temperature really represents the average kinetic energy of the particles and not heat. In a sauna, the air temperature can be over 100°C but the effect on the human body is nowhere near as harsh as boiling water for this reason.
Titan comprises 96% of the mass of all Saturn’s moons put together. This seems actually to be more typical than Jupiter with its four large moons, as similar mass distributions are found among the moons of Uranus and Neptune. The whole system has a kind of quietness and serenity to it, at least from afar. Some of the moons are active, but there’s nothing like the hot volcanism found on Io. All the moons are substantially icy. Saturn’s moons are unique in that some of them have trojans – moons which share their orbits but are sixty degrees behind or ahead of the larger moons. Saturn in general has quite a cluttered and ice-strewn neighbourhood in connection with its rings, and this seems to be part of this aspect of it. This means that the exact number of moons can never be determined because the size of bodies orbiting it goes all the way down, fairly evenly, to miscroscopic grains of ice and dust. In a way, all that can be said is that Titan is the biggest by far, being about the same size as Ganymede.
The five large inner moons, Mimas, Enceladus, Tethys, Dione and Rhea, all participate in the magnetosphere, absorbing protons, as do the particles making up the very sparse E ring. I’ll talk about the rings in detail when I get to Saturn itself, but another unique feature of Saturn’s system is the interaction between the particularly substantial rings and the magnetosphere. The other giant planets have much less substantial rings and therefore less significant interactions. Electrons are absorbed by the main rings, and below the main rings towards Saturn is the least radioactive region of the entire Solar System outside of large bodies and their atmospheres because the rings act as a radiation shield. There is, however, nothing as strong as the plasma tunnels and torus around Io, which influences radio transmissions from Jupiter.
Radio signals from Saturn are weaker than the ones from Jupiter in a broad range from twenty kilohertz to one megahertz, so listening to long or medium wave radio stations there would be right out. Like Jupiter’s System III, which is the common rotation of the interior of the planet with its magnetosphere, Saturn has its own System III, lasting ten hours, 34 minutes and two dozen seconds. There is nothing as strong as Io’s influence, but there is a relatively mild variation corresponding to the time taken for Dione to orbit, 2.7 days. This could be coincidence. When Saturn passes close to Jupiter’s magnetotail, the radio transmissions become undetectable but it isn’t clear whether they cease because of it or are just overwhelmed by Jovian radio noise.
The moons have fairly regularly spaced orbits out to Rhea, although there are some smaller moons which either share orbits with larger moons or regularly swap over. Titan, though, is over twice as far from Saturn as Rhea, then Hyperion is relatively close to Titan, Iapetus over twice as far from Saturn as Hyperion, and finally Phœbe is much further out and orbits backwards compared to the others and the majority of other worlds in the Solar System. This suggests that Phœbe is a captured asteroid. Surprisingly, although it was discovered in 1898, no moons further out were found until the twenty-first century despite the fact that the planet was visited several times by spacecraft. However, almost four dozen moons have now been found which orbit backwards. More than two dozen moons have yet to receive names because there are just so many of them. Even the most distant moon is well within Saturn’s Hill sphere, so it’s still possible that there are more. There’s also a cluster of moons, including shepherd moons and coörbitals, near the rings and possibly even within them, but it should be borne in mind that there’s a judgement call here regarding how big a ring particle is before it counts as a moon or moonlet.
Saturn, and therefore its system to some extent, is tilted 27° with respect to its orbit. This also tilts some of the moons but others are already at odd angles and it’s fairly meaningless to regard them as influenced by this tilt. For Dermott’s Law, mentioned in connection with the Galileans a couple of days ago, T=0.462 days and C=1.59.
I’m going to end on a personal note. I don’t remember Kepler’s third law of planetary motion very clearly, so I always use Saturn to work it out. Saturn is about ten AU from the Sun, i.e. ten times Earth’s distance. The cube of this is a thousand, and that’s square root is thirty. Saturn takes thirty years to orbit the Sun once, hence the Saturn Return of astrology, meaning that the cube of the semimajor axis (average distance from the Sun) of a planet is directly proportional to the square of its sidereal period (“year”).
Next time I’ll be looking at Saturn itself, including its rings, the famous hexagon and the unexpected connection with a certain comedian.
