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Scientists solve mystery of space sponge
Posted by Lev/Christopher on December 6, 2009 at 7:36pm in Science & Technology

This view of Hyperion, captured during the Cassini spacecraft's
flyby in September 2005, reveals details of the moon's spongy surface.
The picture is a combination of images taken using infrared, green and
ultraviolet spectral filters.
They say Saturnian moon Hyperion has a surface that preserves craters
One of the strangest moons in our solar system is Hyperion, a Saturnian
satellite so pockmarked by deep craters that it looks like a giant,
rotating bath sponge adrift in space.
New image analyses suggest the moon's odd appearance is the result of a
highly porous surface that preserves craters, allowing them to remain
nearly as pristine as the day they were created.
The finding is just one of several new details about the quirky moon
revealed in two studies published in Thursday's issue of the journal
Nature. Scientists determined that Hyperion is composed mostly of water
ice and that the bottoms of its craters are covered in a dark red gunk
that could be the key to resolving some of the moon's other strange
properties.
Hyperion is all kinds of weird. It is one of the largest non-spherical
bodies in the solar system. The moon is oval-shaped and about 250 miles
(400 kilometers) at its widest point. Unlike most of Saturn's other
satellites, it is not tidally locked to the ringed planet. Earth's moon
is tidally locked, which is why we always see the same face of it.
Instead, Hyperion undergoes "chaotic rotation," meaning its axis of
rotation shifts so much that scientists can't reliably predict its
orientation in space.
Perhaps the most striking thing about Hyperion, however, is its
extremely pitted appearance. Hundreds of craters cover the surface,
with most averaging 1 to 6 miles (1.6 to 10 kilometers) wide.
The latest analyses of data obtained by NASA's Cassini spacecraft
during its flybys of Hyperion in 2005 and 2006 show that about 40
percent of the moon is empty space.
Hyperion's high porosity could explain its spongelike appearance,
scientists say. A large meteor striking Earth's moon will gouge a deep
hole on the surface and send up a giant spray of rock and dust. The
excavated material rains back down onto the lunar surface and into
other craters, partially filling them in. In contrast, the surface of
Hyperion is so brittle that an object striking it will create a hole
but not send any material flying. Surrounding craters remain as deep as
when they first formed.
"Theoretical work suggests that if you have a porous target, craters
may be more compressional instead of being explosive and tossing stuff
out," said Peter Thomas of Cornell University, who led one of the
studies.
Mystery gunk
The new analyses also confirmed that Hyperion is composed mostly of
water ice with very little rock. "We find that water ice is the main
constituent of the surface, but it's dirty water ice," said Dale
Cruickshank, a researcher at NASA Ames Research Center who led the
second study. "Fresh water ice would look very bright in reflected
sunlight, but this is definitely dingy."
Cosmic Sightings
Get fresh perspectives on the Crab Nebula, the Milky Way and other wonders in November's roundup of out-of-this-world imagery.
Cruickshank's team attributes the moon's dinginess to contamination by
a dark, organic material that litters Hyperion's surface and is
concentrated in several of its craters.
The reddish gunk contains long chains of carbon and hydrogen and
appears very similar to material found on other Saturnian satellites,
most notably Iapetus.
The third-largest moon of Saturn, Iapetus is an unusual two-toned
world, with one half covered in gleaming ice and the other half coated
in the same mysterious dark material that covers Hyperion.
A smashing idea
This link has some scientists speculating that Hyperion's strange shape
and Iaeptus' odd paint job share a common origin. "Maybe Hyperion got
hit and is the origin of this dark stuff which then got spewed out and
got swept up by Iapetus," Cruickshank told Space.com.
According to this idea, a giant object collided with a still-round
Hyperion in the distant past. The impact sent Hyperion into a cosmic
spin that it is still reeling from today and caused a shower of
dustlike particles to fly outwards through space, where it struck an
unaware Iapetus full in the face.
"That's not completely implausible," Cruickshank said. If Iapetus "ran
into a dust storm as it orbited around Saturn, the dust would be
distributed the way we see it."
As to what the object might have been that struck Hyperion, Cruickshank
notes that the same reddish gunk can also be found on other icy objects
in the outer solar system, including other moons, Kuiper Belt objects
and comets.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19602109/
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This page was created on 5 May 2010
Updated on 5 May 2010
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