The Case for Future Gravity Science Investigations at Saturn with a Planetary Orbiter

The next phase in the robotic exploration of the Saturnian system will target unresolved questions about the gas giant’s atmosphere, interior, magnetosphere, and rings that were left open by investigations on board the Cassini mission. Among these, we find gravity science objectives, which relate ma...

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Huvudupphovsman: Marzia Parisi
Materialtyp: Artikel
Språk:English
Publicerad: IOP Publishing 2023-01-01
Serie:The Planetary Science Journal
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Länkar:https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ace7ce
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author Marzia Parisi
author_facet Marzia Parisi
author_sort Marzia Parisi
collection DOAJ
description The next phase in the robotic exploration of the Saturnian system will target unresolved questions about the gas giant’s atmosphere, interior, magnetosphere, and rings that were left open by investigations on board the Cassini mission. Among these, we find gravity science objectives, which relate mainly to explaining the origin of the large wind-induced gravity signal and reconciling existing incongruities regarding the internal density distribution. Here we attempt to identify which future observations may yield additional information about Saturn’s internal mechanisms. We report on the results of precise numerical simulations of a gravity science experiment carried out with a planetary orbiter in the 2040s and characterized by varying periapsis altitude over the 1 bar planetary surface. The goal is to identify achievable measurement requirements that can advance the current understanding of Saturn’s interior and atmospheric dynamics. We find that inclined, elliptical orbits with low-altitude closest approaches over the northern hemisphere can improve the present determination of the gravity field coefficients by up to 1 order of magnitude, provided that at least a dozen pericenters are devoted to gravity science. Furthermore, if future observations are combined with the available Cassini Grand Finale data in the southern hemisphere, a significant improvement in terms of maximum measurable gravity field degree is observed.
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spelling doaj.art-0c68af8e219e45a6ad6c10d9dd4d76632024-02-03T04:56:20ZengIOP PublishingThe Planetary Science Journal2632-33382023-01-014815210.3847/PSJ/ace7ceThe Case for Future Gravity Science Investigations at Saturn with a Planetary OrbiterMarzia Parisi0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4064-6634Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology , Pasadena, CA 91109, USAThe next phase in the robotic exploration of the Saturnian system will target unresolved questions about the gas giant’s atmosphere, interior, magnetosphere, and rings that were left open by investigations on board the Cassini mission. Among these, we find gravity science objectives, which relate mainly to explaining the origin of the large wind-induced gravity signal and reconciling existing incongruities regarding the internal density distribution. Here we attempt to identify which future observations may yield additional information about Saturn’s internal mechanisms. We report on the results of precise numerical simulations of a gravity science experiment carried out with a planetary orbiter in the 2040s and characterized by varying periapsis altitude over the 1 bar planetary surface. The goal is to identify achievable measurement requirements that can advance the current understanding of Saturn’s interior and atmospheric dynamics. We find that inclined, elliptical orbits with low-altitude closest approaches over the northern hemisphere can improve the present determination of the gravity field coefficients by up to 1 order of magnitude, provided that at least a dozen pericenters are devoted to gravity science. Furthermore, if future observations are combined with the available Cassini Grand Finale data in the southern hemisphere, a significant improvement in terms of maximum measurable gravity field degree is observed.https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ace7ceSaturnGravitational fieldsPlanetary atmospheresOrbiters
spellingShingle Marzia Parisi
The Case for Future Gravity Science Investigations at Saturn with a Planetary Orbiter
The Planetary Science Journal
Saturn
Gravitational fields
Planetary atmospheres
Orbiters
title The Case for Future Gravity Science Investigations at Saturn with a Planetary Orbiter
title_full The Case for Future Gravity Science Investigations at Saturn with a Planetary Orbiter
title_fullStr The Case for Future Gravity Science Investigations at Saturn with a Planetary Orbiter
title_full_unstemmed The Case for Future Gravity Science Investigations at Saturn with a Planetary Orbiter
title_short The Case for Future Gravity Science Investigations at Saturn with a Planetary Orbiter
title_sort case for future gravity science investigations at saturn with a planetary orbiter
topic Saturn
Gravitational fields
Planetary atmospheres
Orbiters
url https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ace7ce
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