Where are
Saturn’s ears? Galileo is credited, in 1610, as the first person to see Saturn’s rings. Testing out Lipperhey‘s recently co-invented telescope, Galileo did not know what they were and so called
them “ears“. The mystery deepened in 1612, when Saturn’s ears mysteriously
disappeared. Today we know
exactly what happened: from the perspective of the Earth, Saturn’s rings had become too thin to see. The same drama plays out every 15 years because Saturn, like Earth,
undergoes tilt-driven seasons. This means that as Saturn goes around the Sun, its equator and rings can tilt noticeably toward the Sun and inner Solar System, making them easily visible, but from other orbital
locations will appear almost not at all. The featured picture from Brasilia, Brazil shows a modern version of this sequence: the top
ring-dominated image was taken in 2020, while the bottom ring-obscure image
taken earlier in 2025.
Image & info via APOD
Image Credit & Copyright: Natan Fontes
Source: Saturn’s
Rings Appear to Disappear – Scents of Science

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