Little dust between Saturn and rings: NASA

The space between Saturn and its rings is "the big empty" with surprisingly little dust, NASA says, after looking at data from the Cassini space orbiter.

The planet Saturn and its ring

The space between the planet Saturn and its rings seems to be "relatively dust-free", NASA says. (AAP)

The space between the planet Saturn and its rings seems to be "relatively dust-free", NASA says.

The surprising finding comes from data collected by the Cassini space orbiter, which last week made a first-ever "dive" between Saturn and its rings, according to a news release from the space agency's jet propulsion lab.

"The region between the rings and Saturn is 'the big empty', apparently," Cassini project manager Earl Maize said in a statement on Monday.

That could be good news for Cassini, allowing the orbiter to do some of its coming 21 dives without using its disc-shaped antenna as a shield against dust particles, NASA said.

Using the antenna as a shield rendered Cassini unreachable during its first dive.

Cassini, launched in 1997, has been orbiting Saturn since 2004.

It is scheduled to make a last plunge into Saturn in September, ending its mission.


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Published 2 May 2017 9:12pm
Source: AAP


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