Saturn's rings may have formed from collision with Titan

A new hypothesis suggests that Saturn's iconic rings originated from a massive collision involving its largest moon, Titan, about 400 million years ago. This event could explain several mysteries in the Saturn system, including the youth of the rings and irregularities in orbits and the planet's wobble. Researchers propose that the impact reshaped Titan and triggered subsequent disruptions among the inner moons.

The Saturn system has long puzzled scientists with anomalies such as its relatively young rings, a planetary wobble not aligned with Neptune's motion as expected from simulations, and the tilted orbit of the small moon Iapetus. Titan, Saturn's largest moon, also features few craters and an eccentric orbit.

A study led by Matija Ćuk at the SETI Institute in California proposes that these issues stem from a collision around 400 million years ago between an early version of Titan, dubbed proto-Titan, and a smaller body. This smaller object is hypothesized to be Chrysalis, an extra moon proposed in 2022 to account for Saturn's decoupled wobble from Neptune. Simulations indicate that Chrysalis likely collided with Titan rather than directly disintegrating to form the rings.

The impact would have obliterated Titan's surface craters, shifted its orbit from circular to elliptical, and ejected debris. One fragment may have become the moon Hyperion, which appears younger than Saturn's other moons. Over time, Titan's altered orbit destabilized the inner moons, causing collisions that reduced them to fine particles now comprising the rings.

"This is sort of a grand unified theory that covers all of the major problems," Ćuk stated. "We had some idea about each of them, but this might be how they relate in one story that can be tested."

"It all starts from Titan and then trickles down to a second catastrophe in the inner system," he added.

Sarah Hörst at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland noted, "If a collision with Titan 1.0 can explain many other things about the Saturn system, then I think that would really centre Titan as being pivotal to how we see the system today. I appreciate the elegance of how many Saturn system problems it would solve at once."

Upcoming evidence may come from NASA's Dragonfly mission, set to launch in 2028 and reach Titan in 2034, which will examine the moon's surface for signs of such a merger. The research is detailed in a preprint on arXiv with DOI 10.48550/arXiv.2602.09281.

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New research indicates that Saturn's largest moon, Titan, may have originated from the collision of two earlier moons hundreds of millions of years ago. This event could have reshaped the planet's moon system and contributed to the formation of its rings. Clues include Titan's orbit, surface features, and the behavior of the moon Hyperion.

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