Long-term & large-scale viscous evolution of dense planetary rings
Julien Salmon, S\'ebastien Charnoz, Aur\'elien Crida, Andr\'e, Brahic

TL;DR
This study models the long-term evolution of dense planetary rings using a realistic viscosity model, revealing significantly extended lifetimes and different spreading behaviors compared to constant viscosity assumptions.
Contribution
It introduces a physically realistic viscosity model based on N-body simulations to study planetary ring evolution, highlighting the importance of gravitational wakes and variable viscosity.
Findings
Ring spreading time-scales are much longer with realistic viscosity.
The width of rings scales as t^{1/4} in the model, slower than t^{1/2}.
Saturn's rings resemble a 100-million-year-old disk in the simulation.
Abstract
We investigate the long-term and large-scale viscous evolution of dense planetary rings using a simple 1D numerical code. We use a physically realistic viscosity model derived from N-body simulations (Daisaka et al., 2001), and dependent on the disk's local properties (surface mass density, particle size, distance to the planet). Particularly, we include the effects of gravitational instabilities (wakes) that importantly enhance the disk's viscosity. We show that common estimates of the disk's spreading time-scales with constant viscosity significantly underestimate the rings' lifetime. With a realistic viscosity model, an initially narrow ring undergoes two successive evolutionary stages: (1) a transient rapid spreading when the disk is self-gravitating, with the formation of a density peak inward and an outer region marginally gravitationally stable, and with an emptying time-scale…
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