University of Leicester
Browse

Water‐Ice Dominated Spectra of Saturn's Rings and Small Moons From JWST

Download (2.2 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-21, 16:06 authored by MM Hedman, MS Tiscareno, MR Showalter, Leigh FletcherLeigh Fletcher, ORT King, J Harkett, MT Roman, N Rowe‐Gurney, HB Hammel, SN Milam, M El Moutamid, RJ Cartwright, I de Pater, EM Molter

JWST measured the infrared spectra of Saturn's rings and several of its small moons (Epimetheus, Pandora, Telesto, and Pallene) as part of Guaranteed Time Observation program 1247. The NIRSpec instrument obtained near‐infrared spectra of the small moons between 0.6 and 5.3 microns, which are all dominated by water‐ice absorption bands. The shapes of the water‐ice bands for these moons suggests that their surfaces contain variable mixes of crystalline and amorphous ice or variable amounts of contaminants and/or sub‐micron ice grains. The near‐infrared spectrum of Saturn's A ring has exceptionally high signal‐to‐noise between 2.7 and 5 microns and is dominated by features due to highly crystalline water ice. The ring spectrum also confirms that the rings possess a 2%–3% deep absorption at 4.13 microns due to deuterated water ice previously seen by the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer onboard the Cassini spacecraft. This spectrum also constrains the fundamental absorption bands of carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide and may contain evidence for a weak aliphatic hydrocarbon band. Meanwhile, the MIRI instrument obtained mid‐infrared spectra of the rings between 4.9 and 27.9 microns, where the observed signal is a combination of reflected sunlight and thermal emission. This region shows a strong reflectance peak centered around 9.3 microns that can be attributed to crystalline water ice. Since both the near and mid‐infrared spectra are dominated by highly crystalline water ice, they should provide a useful baseline for interpreting the spectra of other objects in the outer solar system with more complex compositions.

Funding

Giants through Time: Towards a Comprehensive Giant Planet Climatology

European Research Council

Find out more...

NASA JWST Interdisciplinary Science. Grant Number: 21-SMDSS21-0013

STFC studentship

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering/Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets

Volume

129

Issue

3

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

issn

2169-9097

eissn

2169-9100

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-03-21

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Leigh Fletcher

Deposit date

2024-03-21

Data Access Statement

Level-3 calibrated data from the standard pipeline are available directly from the MAST archive https://mast.stsci.edu. The JWST calibration pipeline is described in Bushouse et al. (2023), and the custom pipeline and initial data processing code is described in King et al. (2023). The Jupyter notebooks used to produce the spectra shown in this study, along with relevant input files and csv files of the flux spectra for the rings and small moons, are available at https://github.com/JWSTGiantPlanets/SaturnRingsMoons and via Hedman (2024).

Rights Retention Statement

  • No

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC