- #1
FtlIsAwesome
Gold Member
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I've been thinking about rings. More massive objects would more likely be able to have rings. I think we'll eventually find superEarths, and even subEarths, that have rings.
All the gas planets in our solar system have rings, but only Saturn has prominent ones.
Exo-ring systems could vary between faint and prominent.
I also think that moons can have rings. Currently astronomers are investigating if Rhea, moon of Saturn, has its own faint rings.
For prominent rings to be in its favor, a moon should be large, a good distance away from its parent planet, the parent planet low in mass, other moons if any not disrupting the rings, and the ringed moon not sharing a rotational or orbital resonance with any of the other moons or the parent planet. Having no other moons will also increase the chances.
The rings will need to be within the object's Hill sphere. They'll need to be outside the Roche limit unless the pieces have the required tensile strength.
My guess is that the rings will usually align with the equator. Can they be inclined relative to the equator?
Saturn's rings are icy, so for planets/moons closer to the local sun the rings will be rocky due to the increased heat.
I found this paper on the detectability of jovian planets with rings, which I only skimmed.
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/astro-ph/pdf/0510/0510594v1.pdf
I am also interested in rocky thick rings, rings that have much larger rocks that Saturn. Like "asteroid belts" as commonly incorrectly depicted in fiction. Can rings be this way? Will an massive impact on a moon result in this?
Can multiple moons have ring systems?
Instead of a ring system, can planets have torus-shaped or spherical dust clouds?
Thoughts? Corrections?
All the gas planets in our solar system have rings, but only Saturn has prominent ones.
Exo-ring systems could vary between faint and prominent.
I also think that moons can have rings. Currently astronomers are investigating if Rhea, moon of Saturn, has its own faint rings.
For prominent rings to be in its favor, a moon should be large, a good distance away from its parent planet, the parent planet low in mass, other moons if any not disrupting the rings, and the ringed moon not sharing a rotational or orbital resonance with any of the other moons or the parent planet. Having no other moons will also increase the chances.
The rings will need to be within the object's Hill sphere. They'll need to be outside the Roche limit unless the pieces have the required tensile strength.
My guess is that the rings will usually align with the equator. Can they be inclined relative to the equator?
Saturn's rings are icy, so for planets/moons closer to the local sun the rings will be rocky due to the increased heat.
I found this paper on the detectability of jovian planets with rings, which I only skimmed.
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/astro-ph/pdf/0510/0510594v1.pdf
I am also interested in rocky thick rings, rings that have much larger rocks that Saturn. Like "asteroid belts" as commonly incorrectly depicted in fiction. Can rings be this way? Will an massive impact on a moon result in this?
Can multiple moons have ring systems?
Instead of a ring system, can planets have torus-shaped or spherical dust clouds?
Thoughts? Corrections?