DYNAMICAL EVIDENCE FOR A LATE FORMATION OF SATURN'S MOONS

被引:96
作者
Cuk, Matija [1 ]
Dones, Luke [2 ]
Nesvorny, David [2 ]
机构
[1] SETI Inst, Carl Sagan Ctr, 189 North Bernardo Ave, Mountain View, CA 94043 USA
[2] Southwest Res Inst, Boulder, CO 80302 USA
关键词
planets and satellites: dynamical evolution and stability; planets and satellites: formation; planets and satellites: individual (Tethys; Dione; Rhea; Titan); FAST-SPINNING EARTH; TIDAL DISSIPATION; EARLY EVOLUTION; GIANT PLANETS; MASSIVE RINGS; SYSTEM; ENCELADUS; SATELLITE; TETHYS; MIMAS;
D O I
10.3847/0004-637X/820/2/97
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
We explore the past evolution of Saturn's moons using direct numerical integrations. We find that the past Tethys-Dione 3: 2 orbital resonance predicted in standard models likely did not occur, implying that the system is less evolved than previously thought. On the other hand, the orbital inclinations of Tethys, Dione, and Rhea suggest that the system did cross the Dione-Rhea 5: 3 resonance, which is closely followed by a Tethys-Dione secular resonance. A clear implication is that either the moons are significantly younger than the planet. or. their tidal evolution must be extremely slow (Q > 80,000). As an extremely slow. evolving system is incompatible with intense tidal heating of Enceladus, we conclude that the moons interior to Titan are not primordial, and we present a plausible scenario for the system's recent formation. We propose that the midsized moons re-accreted from a disk about 100 Myr ago, during which time Titan acquired its significant orbital eccentricity. We speculate that this disk has formed through orbital instability and massive collisions involving the previous generation of Saturn's midsized moons. We identify the solar evection resonance perturbing a pair of midsized moons as the most likely trigger of such an instability. This scenario implies that most craters on the moons interior to Titan must have been formed by planetocentric impactors.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 51 条
[1]  
ALLAN RR, 1969, ASTRON J, V74, P497, DOI 10.1086/110827
[2]   Fates of satellite ejecta in the Saturn system [J].
Alvarellos, JL ;
Zahnle, KJ ;
Dobrovolskis, AR ;
Hamill, P .
ICARUS, 2005, 178 (01) :104-123
[3]   Hit-and-run planetary collisions [J].
Asphaug, E ;
Agnor, CB ;
Williams, Q .
NATURE, 2006, 439 (7073) :155-160
[4]   Late origin of the Saturn system [J].
Asphaug, Erik ;
Reufer, Andreas .
ICARUS, 2013, 223 (01) :544-565
[5]  
Bierhaus E. B., 2015, BAAS, V47
[6]   The role of ejecta in the small crater populations on the mid-sized saturnian satellites [J].
Bierhaus, Edward B. ;
Dones, Luke ;
Alvarellos, Jose Luis ;
Zahnle, Kevin .
ICARUS, 2012, 218 (01) :602-621
[7]  
Brouwer D., 1961, Methods of celestial mechanics
[8]   Dynamically depleted zones for Cassini's safe passage beyond Saturn's rings [J].
Burns, JA ;
Gladman, BJ .
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE, 1998, 46 (9-10) :1401-1407
[9]   Origin of Saturn's rings and inner moons by mass removal from a lost Titan-sized satellite [J].
Canup, Robin M. .
NATURE, 2010, 468 (7326) :943-946
[10]   Symplectic integrator algorithms for modeling planetary accretion in binary star systems [J].
Chambers, JE ;
Quintana, EV ;
Duncan, MJ ;
Lissauer, JJ .
ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL, 2002, 123 (05) :2884-2894