Image Credit: M. Belton (NOAO), J. Burns (Cornell) et al., Galileo Project, JPL, NASA
Explanation: Why does Jupiter have rings?
Jupiter's rings were discovered in 1979 by the passing
Voyager 1 spacecraft, but their origin was a mystery. Data from the
Galileo spacecraft that orbited
Jupiter from 1995 to 2003 later confirmed that
these rings were created by
meteoroid impacts on
small nearby moons. As a small meteoroid strikes tiny
Adrastea, for example, it will
bore into the moon, vaporize, and explode dirt and dust off into a
Jovian orbit.
Pictured above is an
eclipse of the Sun by Jupiter, as viewed from Galileo. Small dust particles high in
Jupiter's atmosphere, as well as the
dust particles that
compose the rings, can be seen by
reflected sunlight.
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