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Micrometeoroid infall onto Saturn's rings constrains their age to no more than a few hundred million years.

Sascha KempfNicolas AltobelliJürgen SchmidtJeffrey N CuzziPaul R EstradaRalf Srama
Published in: Science advances (2023)
There is ongoing debate as to whether Saturn's main rings are relatively young or ancient- having been formed shortly after Saturn or during the Late Heavy Bombardment. The rings are mostly water-ice but are polluted by non-icy material with a volume fraction ranging from ∼0.1 to 2%. Continuous bombardment by micrometeoroids exogenic to the Saturnian system is a source of this non-icy material. Knowledge of the incoming mass flux of these pollutants allows estimation of the rings' exposure time, providing a limit on their age. Here we report the final measurements by Cassini's Cosmic Dust Analyzer of the micrometeoroid flux into the Saturnian system. Several populations are present, but the flux is dominated by low-relative velocity objects such as from the Kuiper belt. We find a mass flux between 6.9 · 10 -17 and 2.7 · 10 -16 kg m -2 s -1 from which we infer a ring exposure time ≲100 to 400 million years in support of recent ring formation scenarios.
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