NewsKopie: Was wäre, wenn die Erde Ringe hätte?

Montag, 30. November 2009

Was wäre, wenn die Erde Ringe hätte?

Ein Video auf Youtube zeigt, wie die Erde aussehen würde, wenn sie Ringe wie der Saturn hätte. Dabei sind Aufnahmen zu sehen, wie der Himmel an verschiedenen Orten der Welt aussehen würde. Doch so ein Ringsystem hätte tiefgreifende Einwirkungen auf die Erde.

Nach John O´Keefe vom "NASA Goddard Space Flight Center" könnte die Erde schon einmal Ringe gehabt haben. Vor 34 Millionen Jahren endete das Eozän-Zeitalter. Es gibt Anzeichen für Meteoritenschauer in dieser Zeit. Einige dieser Meteoriten könnten für Millionen von Jahren einen Ring gebildet haben.

Im Schatten des Ringes herrschte Winter, was das Ende des Eozäns hinausgezögert haben könnte. Dass die Erde heute keinen Ring mehr hat, wäre dem Mond mit seiner Gravitation und der Nähe der Erde zur Sonne zuzuschreiben.

What would rings around Earth look like?

A video currently making the rounds on the Web ponders an intriguing astronomical scenario: What if Earth had rings, as Saturn does?

If the animation below, by YouTube user Roy Prol, is to be believed (and it seems to jibe with related imaginings, such as one in a NASA educator guide about Saturn [pdf]), rings would be a stunning addition to Earth's sky, day or night. And Prol's video shows that rings would make a heck of a nice backdrop for photographers of terrestrial landmarks (for example, Paris's Eiffel Tower, Rio's Christ the Redeemer, Australia's Ayers Rock) around the globe.

But such a ring, if it were to suddenly appear, might not be all good news. Decades ago, John O'Keefe of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center ventured that Earth may have had a ring system similar to Saturn's for a brief period. In a 1980 paper in Nature, O'Keefe pointed to climatic data indicating colder winters at the end of the Eocene epoch some 34 million years ago along with showers of tektites, glassy rocks of mysterious origin, at around the same time. O'Keefe's theory held that tektites that missed the Earth in this bombardment were captured into a ring system that may have persisted for millions of years, casting a winter shadow across Earth's surface and contributing to a late Eocene die-off of many marine organisms such as plankton and mollusks.

If Earth may have once had rings, why doesn't it now? Two reasons come to mind, says planetary ring scientist Linda Spilker of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. The first is the massive moon that drives our tides and helps stabilize Earth's tilt—two effects that make our planet so habitable. "The tidal pull from our moon would be very good at disrupting and dissipating any sort of ring," Spilker says. "Second, the solar perturbations (tidal pull from the sun) are much larger at Earth, and the terrestrial planets, than they are at Jupiter and outward." Those forces would break up a ring, Spilker adds, and the push from solar photons and streaming charged particles in the solar wind would disturb small constituents in Earth-centric rings as well.

Keine Kommentare:

Kommentar veröffentlichen