Photopolarimetry from Voyager 2; Preliminary Results on Saturn, Titan, and the Rings
- 29 January 1982
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 215 (4532) , 537-543
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.215.4532.537
Abstract
The Voyager 2 photopolarimeter was reprogrammed prior to the August 1981 Saturn encounter to perform orthogonal-polarization, two-color measurements on Saturn, Titan, and the rings. Saturn's atmosphere has ultraviolet limb brightening in the mid-latitudes and pronounced polar darkening north of 65°N. Titan's opaque atmosphere shows strong positive polarization at all phase angles (2.7° to 154°), and no single-size spherical particle model appears to fit the data. A single radial stellar occultation of the darkened, shadowed rings indicated a ring thickness of less than 200 meters at several locations and clear evidence for density waves caused by satellite resonances. Multiple, very narrow strands of material were found in the Encke division and within the brightest single strand of the F ring.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sunlight absorption by aerosols in Jupiter's upper atmosphereGeophysical Research Letters, 1981
- On the radial structure of Saturn's ringsGeophysical Research Letters, 1981
- Orbits of nine Uranian ringsThe Astronomical Journal, 1981
- Titan aerosols: Optical properties and vertical distributionIcarus, 1980
- Imaging Photopolarimeter on Pioneer SaturnScience, 1980
- Photometric Observations of Jupiter at 2400 AngstromsScience, 1979
- Infrared Observations of the Jovian System from Voyager 2Science, 1979
- Jupiter's magnetic tailNature, 1979
- The vertical structure and thickness of Saturn's ringsIcarus, 1979
- On inhomogeneous scattering models of Titan's atmosphereIcarus, 1979