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Saturnian "Propellers" (context frame)
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The Cassini spacecraft captures 8 new propeller-like features within Saturn's A-Ring in what may be the propeller "hot zone" of Saturn's Rings.
Propeller features form around small moonlets that are not massive enough to clear out ring material, but are still able to pull smaller ring particles into a shape reminiscent of an airplane propeller. Scientists believe that propellers represent moonlet wakes, which are denser than the surrounding ring material and appear bright in the images.
Propellers were first discovered in Cassini images taken during Saturn orbit insertion in 2004. This new image is from a more extensive study of the full A-Ring and provides evidence that these features are not distributed evenly as previously thought, but are instead grouped in a 3000 Km-wide (about 1860 mile) Propeller Belt.
The largest propeller seen here is noted in the white dashed box, and it indicates the presence of a 150-meter (490-foot) moonlet. The size is inferred from the radial separation of the propeller wings. The propeller is seen in another image and is shown in the upper left box.
The reappearance of the propellers clearly demonstrates their orbital motion.
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