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Photometric analyses of Saturn's small moons: Aegaeon, Methone and Pallene are dark; Helene and Calypso are bright

Authors :
Hedman, M. M.
Helfenstein, P.
Chancia, R. O.
Thomas, P.
Roussos, E.
Paranicas, C.
Verbiscer, A. J.
Hedman, M. M.
Helfenstein, P.
Chancia, R. O.
Thomas, P.
Roussos, E.
Paranicas, C.
Verbiscer, A. J.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We examine the surface brightnesses of Saturn's smaller satellites using a photometric model that explicitly accounts for their elongated shapes and thus facilitates comparisons among different moons. Analyses of Cassini imaging data with this model reveals that the moons Aegaeon, Methone and Pallene are darker than one would expect given trends previously observed among the nearby mid-sized satellites. On the other hand, the trojan moons Calypso and Helene have substantially brighter surfaces than their co-orbital companions Tethys and Dione. These observations are inconsistent with the moons' surface brightnesses being entirely controlled by the local flux of E-ring particles, and therefore strongly imply that other phenomena are affecting their surface properties. The darkness of Aegaeon, Methone and Pallene is correlated with the fluxes of high-energy protons, implying that high-energy radiation is responsible for darkening these small moons. Meanwhile, Prometheus and Pandora appear to be brightened by their interactions with nearby dusty F ring, implying that enhanced dust fluxes are most likely responsible for Calypso's and Helene's excess brightness. However, there are no obvious structures in the E ring that would preferentially brighten these two moons, so there must either be something subtle in the E-ring particles' orbital properties that leads to asymmetries in the relevant fluxes, or something happened recently to temporarily increase these moons' brightnesses.<br />Comment: 93 pages, 23 figures, 28 tables. Accepted for publication in AJ. Updated to fix some typographical errors identified in the proof stage

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1176396028
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847.1538-3881.ab659d