FacebookInstagramTwitterContact

 

Dragon Boat Races Music Video Blends Chinese And Western Music, Celebrating Guangdong's Cultural Heritage           >>           Eating Cruciferous Greens Helps Your Immune System Fight Off Intestinal Pathogens           >>           Athletes Who Want To Improve Their Performance Should Try Supplementing With Saffron           >>           Low-Impact Aerobic Exercise Can Rehabilitate Your Spine And Alleviate Your Pain           >>           Boy, 9, Finds World's Longest Chip In Bag Of Frozen Mccain Fries           >>           Australian Woman Travels 24 Hours To Try Viral British Jacket Potato With Baked Beans           >>           Scheana Shay Has A Prediction About Vanderpump Rules' Future Amid Hiatus           >>           Billy Ray Cyrus Files For Temporary Restraining Order Against Ex Firerose Amid Divorce           >>           Something 'Kicked' This Hypervelocity Star Racing Through The Milky Way At 1.3 Million Miles Per Hour (Video)           >>           The Next Nintendo Direct Takes Place On June 18           >>          

 

SHARE THIS ARTICLE




REACH US


GENERAL INQUIRY

[email protected]

 

ADVERTISING

[email protected]

 

PRESS RELEASE

[email protected]

 

HOTLINE

+673 222-0178 [Office Hour]

+673 223-6740 [Fax]

 



Upcoming Events





Prayer Times


The prayer times for Brunei-Muara and Temburong districts. For Tutong add 1 minute and for Belait add 3 minutes.


Imsak

: 05:01 AM

Subuh

: 05:11 AM

Syuruk

: 06:29 AM

Doha

: 06:51 AM

Zohor

: 12:32 PM

Asar

: 03:44 PM

Maghrib

: 06:32 PM

Isyak

: 07:42 PM

 



The Business Directory


 

 



Space & Science


  Home > Space & Science


Interstellar Dust Found At Saturn


Of the millions of dust grains NASA’s Cassini spacecraft has sampled at Saturn, a few dozen appear to have come from beyond our solar system. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

 


 April 20th, 2016  |  09:28 AM  |   2078 views

Space.com

 

Some of the dust swirling around Saturn comes from beyond the solar system, a new study reveals.

 

NASA's Saturn-orbiting Cassini spacecraft has sampled millions of dust grains since arriving at the ringed planet in 2004. While most of those grains come from jets erupting from Saturn's icy moon Enceladus, 36 of them were born between the stars, researchers said.

 

Cassini's find is not unprecedented; NASA's Jupiter-orbiting Galileo spacecraft and Ulysses, a sun-studying NASA/European Space Agency probe, both spotted dust that had interstellar origins. In both cases, the dust was believed to be a part of the local interstellar cloud, the zone of gas and dust through which our solar system is moving. [Saturn Photos: Latest Images from NASA's Cassini Orbiter]

 

"From that discovery, we always hoped we would be able to detect these interstellar interlopers at Saturn with Cassini. We knew that if we looked in the right direction, we should find them," study lead author Nicolas Altobelli, Cassini project scientist at the European Space Agency, said in a statement.

 

"Indeed, on average, we have captured a few of these dust grains per year, traveling at high speed and on a specific path quite different from that of the usual icy grains we collect around Saturn," he added.

 

Cassini's instruments have also allowed scientists to see what the dust is made of — something the Ulysses and Galileo missions were not able to do. The alien grains contain rock-forming elements such as magnesium, silicon, iron and calcium — all in abundances that meet the average for cosmic proportions, researchers said. Sulfur and carbon, however, were not as common as they are in "average" space dust.

 

Cassini's interstellar grains also varied little in composition, which surprised scientists. This uniformity makes them different from stardust grains found in some meteorites, which tend to be quite diverse.

 

"Cosmic dust is produced when stars die, but with the vast range of types of stars in the universe, we naturally expected to encounter a huge range of dust types over the long period of our study," co-author Frank Postberg, of the University of Heidelberg in Germany, a co-investigator on Cassini's dust analyzer, said in the same statement.

 

It's possible that shock waves produced by supernova explosions could destroy cosmic dust, which might recondense several times, becoming more uniform over time, researchers said.Cassini will end its mission in September 2017 with an intentional death dive into Saturn, to avoid the chance of its crashing on a potentially life-friendly moon and thereby contaminating the surface. A similar procedure was followed for the Galileo mission at Jupiter, which concluded in 2003.

 

Dozens of spacecraft have traveled through the solar system, but only one — Voyager 1 – has reached interstellar space. Voyager 1 is still communicating with Earth as it travels outward.

 


 

Source:
courtesy of SPACE

by Elizabeth Howell

 

If you have any stories or news that you would like to share with the global online community, please feel free to share it with us by contacting us directly at [email protected]

 

Related News


Lahad Datu Murder: Remand Of 13 Students Extende

 2024-03-30 07:57:54

Singapore Races To Clean Up Beaches After Oil Spill

 2024-06-18 02:00:52

Green Energy Plan 'Won't Benefit' Welsh Valley Residents

 2024-06-18 02:40:47