Friday, May 17, 2024

Creation Moment 5/18/2024 - The Delicate Dance around Saturn

Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God.... Hebrews 11:3
"Planetary rings are also made up of billions of dead things, despite some evolutionists’ wild imaginations that life might be found in them. Such claims are pseudoscientific, not only because 
--there is no evidence for them, 
--and the necessary conditions do not exist there, 
--but also because there is not enough time for the magic of “chemical evolution” to have transpired.
*That such claims could be made in the media is more evidence that astrobiology (better dubbed bio-astrology) is pseudoscience.

Could alien life be hiding in the rings of Saturn or Jupiter? (Space.com, 7 May 2024). In his headline, reporter Jason Rao must have decided to lay out clickbait to catch the unwary, because even he knows that planetary rings are no place to be looking for life. Saturn’s rings meet two requirements, he claims: an energy source and organic matter. But there’s no water. ‘Two out of three ain’t bad,’ he thinks.

"Take the spectacular rings of Saturn. Within them, two of the three requirements for life as we know it are known to exist. Even out here, there is plenty of sunlight to feed life. And while Saturn’s rings might
seem an unlikely place for organic matter to exist, NASA’s Cassini mission found that carbon compounds like butane and propane rain into the gas giant’s atmosphere from its innermost
D-ring.
Unfortunately, the third ingredient — liquid water — is missing. “You do have organic material falling into the rings, and there is sunlight, but there’s just no liquid water,” Matthew Tiscareno, a planetary scientist at the SETI Institute in California, told Space.com. “There’s plenty of water, but it’s all frozen.”

Since the rings also contain some oxygen, maybe he should fire up his propane or butane torches to see what emerges out there in some imaginary Miller experiment.

*Tiscareno makes his living in the belief that chemical evolution of dead things led to the rise of advanced civilizations around the universe
But Rao’s suggestion is a bridge too far even for that evidence-free pseudoscience. Tiscareno must maintain a simulacrum of scientific decor for planetary “scientist” to appear on his resume. “I like the idea of thinking about creative places where life could be,” he dreams, which is what SETI scientists do all day long, whenever uncomfortable facts are not clouding their imaginations with fogma. Unfortunately for them, Christian chemist Dr James Tour from Rice University has already blown the fog away (8 Nov 2023), leaving ten of the leading chemical evolutionists looking like the sons of Sceva, naked and wounded.

Believers in ring life have another major hurdle: there is not enough time.
A new paper in Science Advances on May 10 casts new doubt on
rings lasting for billions of years. Authored by planetary ringmaster Jeff Cuzzi and colleagues, the paper examined data from the Radio Science Subsystem (RSS) instrument aboard the Cassini spacecraft. RSS performed occultations of the rings (i.e., viewing distant starlight leaking through the rings as the spacecraft moved). These experiments allowed scientists to assess the density of the rings, and also to calculate particle diameters. The data were particularly interesting for one of
Saturn’s most tenuous rings, the F-ring, which orbits outside the main rings. This ring astonished scientists during the Voyager mission flybys in the early 1980s, because it was found to be comprised of several individual strands that appeared to be braided around each other!

Cassini disproved the “braidinghypothesis; two “shepherd moons” on either side of the F-ring, named Prometheus and Pandora
were found to keep the ring particles confined in a delicate balance of forces, otherwise the particles would drift away into space. 
But Cassini did identify a number of separate strands in the F-ring along with “kinks” where density was higher. 
The RSS data also confirmed that most of the ring is composed of
particles with diameters in the microns—about as small as smoke particles. (This is also true of
Jupiter’s faint rings, and in Saturn’s wispy G-ring, and the E-ring that is produced by the geysers at Enceladus.) 
There were, however, clusters of particles in the F-ring a thousand times larger: still tiny, but in the millimeter range. Having combined mass a thousand times higher, clusters of these larger particles pull the micron-sized particles toward them, but there’s a problem: the larger particles are not evenly distributed throughout the ring. They cluster into “ring arcs,” similar to those in Neptune’s Adams ring.

Q: How, then, can the small particles avoid escaping the F-ring over time?
Q: What happens when chaotic interactions occur? 
Since orbital conjunctions between Prometheus and specific F ring longitudes are phased to occur only when Prometheus is at its
periapse, furthest from the
F ring and least likely to deliver a strong enough gravitational impulse to send the ring particles off onto chaotically diverging orbits, it seems likely that at apoapse (closest to the ring) the particles could become destabilized, careening out of the ring altogether. 
The authors mention the possibility of “unusually strong, chaos-inducing perturbations” when Prometheus is closer to the F-ring. They also mention that late in the Cassini mission (2013), “Prometheus had glitched to a new orbitproducing four anomalous measurements they chose to ignore.
Q: How often does that happen? Those are probably not rare: “Saturn system gravitational interactions and is also known to incur large, somewhat impulsive, jumps due to chaotic interactions with Pandora.”

An obvious question arises: 
Q: Has this delicate dance been going on for 4.5 billion years? 
The authors of the paper do not address that question with an estimated lifetime. They only say in the conclusion,
"Because Prometheus’ orbit does evolve chaotically by small increments (and we think we have seen one such event), the true core material must be able to adapt and track stable sites that move by small amounts now and then…. Perhaps an even more notable problem, which our theory does not resolve, is how these disconnected arcs manage to maintain a common, uniformly precessing, eccentric orbit."

Since deep-time believers hesitate to invoke special times at which phenomena like this are observable when humans happen to exist, it seems the burden is on them to explain how such delicate interactions can last for billions of years." 
CEH