4.7 Article

The discovery of oxygen Kα X-ray emission from the rings of Saturn

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 627, Issue 1, Pages L73-L76

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/431933

Keywords

planets and satellites : individual (Saturn); planets : rings; scattering; Sun : X-rays, gamma rays; Xrays : general; X rays : individual (Saturn's rings)

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Using the Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS), the Chandra X-Ray Observatory observed the Saturnian system for one rotation of the planet (similar to 37 ks) on 2004 January 20 and again on January 26-27. In this Letter we report the detection of X-ray emission from the rings of Saturn. The X-ray spectrum from the rings is dominated by emission in a narrow (similar to 130 eV-wide) energy band centered on the atomic oxygen K alpha fluorescence line at 0.53 keV. The X-ray power emitted from the rings in the 0.49-0.62 keV band is 84 MW, which is about one-third of that emitted from Saturn's disk in the photon energy range 0.24-2.0 keV. Our analysis also finds a clear detection of X-ray emission from the rings in the 0.49-0.62 keV band in an earlier 2003 April 14-15) Chandra ACIS observation of Saturn. Fluorescent scattering of solar X-rays from oxygen atoms in the H2O icy ring material is the likely source mechanism for ring X-rays, consistent with the scenario of the solar photo-production of a tenuous oxygen atmosphere and ionosphere over the rings recently discovered by Cassini.

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