WHAT ARE SHEPHERD MOONS?

Two of Saturn’s moons – Pandora and Prometheus — are known as shepherd moons. They orbit either side of the narrow F rings, and have earned their name because their gravitational pull prevents the particles in this ring from straying out into space.

Saturn, which is the second largest planet in our solar system, is known to have multiple rings and satellites. In 1979, Pioneer 11 discovered the F Ring, located 3,000 kilometres (1900 miles) beyond the outer edge of the A Ring. The F Ring is very active, with features changing on a timescale of hours.

The F Ring is also very narrow with a width of only a few hundred kilometres, and has two shepherd satellites called Prometheus and Pandora, which orbit inside and outside the ring, respectively. Although the Voyager and Cassini spacecraft later made detailed observations of the F Ring and its shepherd satellites, their origin has not been clarified.

According to the latest satellite formation theory, Saturn used to have ancient rings containing many more particles than they do today, and satellites formed from spreading and accretion of these particles. During the final stage of satellite formation, multiple small satellites tend to form near the outer edge of the ring. On the other hand, observations by Cassini indicate that the small satellites orbiting near the outer edge of the main ring system have a dense core.

In their simulations using in part computer systems at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, Hyodo and Ohtsuki revealed that the F Ring and its shepherd satellites formed as these small satellites with a dense core collided and partially disintegrated. In other words, the system of the F Ring and its shepherd satellites is a natural outcome of the formation process of Saturn’s ring-satellite system.

This new finding is expected to help elucidate the formation of satellite systems both within and outside our solar system. For example, the above formation mechanism can also be applied to the rings and shepherd satellites of Uranus, which are similar to those of Saturn.

Picture Credit : Google