Advertisement

Origin of Saturn's 'walnut' moon suggested

A ridge that follows the equator of Saturn's moon Iapetus gives it the appearance of a giant walnut. The ridge, photographed in 2004 by the Cassini spacecraft, is 62 miles wide and 12 miles high in some places. (The peak of Mount Everest, by comparison, is 5.5 miles above sea level.) Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute.
A ridge that follows the equator of Saturn's moon Iapetus gives it the appearance of a giant walnut. The ridge, photographed in 2004 by the Cassini spacecraft, is 62 miles wide and 12 miles high in some places. (The peak of Mount Everest, by comparison, is 5.5 miles above sea level.) Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute.

CHICAGO, April 9 (UPI) -- A distinctive feature of Saturn's moon Iapetus that makes it look like a giant walnut may be the remains of an ancient companion moon, U.S. astronomers say.

A mountain range like no other in the solar system encircles the equator of Iapetus up to 12.4 miles high and 124 miles wide, forming a ridge that makes the moon resemble a walnut.

Advertisement

No other planet or moon in the solar system has this kind of ridge, a feature that has long puzzled astronomers.

"I would love to stand at the base of this wall of ice 20 kilometers tall that heads off straight in either direction until it dips below the horizon," Andrew Dombard, a planetary scientist at the University of Illinois at Chicago, told SPACE.com.

Dombard and fellow researchers suggest the ridge could be the remains of a dead moon, created by a giant impact more than 4.5 billion years ago.

Rubble blasted from Iapetus in the impact could have coalesced around Iapetus as a "sub-satellite," a moon of a moon, they said.

Then the gravitational pull of Iapetus could have eventually torn the companion moon back into pieces, creating an orbiting ring of debris that then rained down onto Iapetus, forming the ridge that now exists.

Advertisement

The ridge could have formed in a short time, in cosmic terms, "probably on a scale of centuries," Dombard said.

Latest Headlines