Abstract

Stellar occultation data from Cassini’s Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph (UVIS) have revealed diffraction spikes near sharp edges in Saturn’s rings. The UVIS High Speed Photometer (HSP) observes these spikes as signals at ring edges that surpass measurements of the unocculted stellar signal. In Saturn’s A ring, diffracted light can augment the direct stellar signal by up to 6% and can be detected tens of kilometers radially from the edge. The radial profile of the diffraction signal is dependent on the size distribution of the particle population near the ring edge. These diffraction signals are clearly observed at sharp edges throughout Saturn’s ring system. In this paper we focus on the clearest detections at the outer edge of the A ring and at the edges of the Encke Gap.We present a forward model in which we reconstruct the spacecraft’s observations for each stellar occultation by ring edges. The model produces a synthetic diffraction signal for a given truncated power-law particle size distribution, which we compare with the observed signal. We find an overall steepening of the power-law size distribution and a decrease in the minimum particle size at the outer edge of the A ring when compared with the Encke Gap edges. This suggests that interparticle collisions caused by satellite perturbations in the region result in more shedding of regolith or fragmentation of particles in the outermost parts of the A ring. We rule out any significant population of sub-millimeter-sized particles in Saturn’s A ring, placing a lower limitation of 1-mm on the minimum particle size in the ring.

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