Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Ring Around The.... Planets?

Open a new tab in your internet browser (yes, right now). Go to Google and pull up an image of Saturn (I don't care that you know what it looks like, just do it). Remember that picture, and look up a picture of Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune as well. Now if I start singing the song "One of these things is not like the other…" what would your answer be?...... The answer I was going for was Saturn! What's so different about Saturn? Well as you saw from the picture, Saturn has a beautiful ring structure and the other planets don’t….. Wrong! Believe it or not, all of the gas giant planets have rings! (Now if you didn't actually go to Google before, I bet you are now just to see if you can find a wiki page on ringed planets to see if I'm right.) 


Saturn's ring structure is very bright and prominent because it is thick and made mostly of ice which reflects light. The rings around Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune are much thinner and are mostly made of rocks. Pictures of each planets rings are shown above. There's a big black spot over Neptune because Neptune is so bright compared to its rings that the planet's light needed to be blocked out so the rings were visible . Now when someone refers to Saturn as the ringed planet you can say "actually, all the gas giants have rings… but I know which one you mean."

Image credits: NASA/Voyager/J. Rayner/NSFCAM/IRTF