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This helps explain Tethys, an odd inner moon that didn't quite fit other moon formation theories, she said. Saturn has 62 moons
-- 53 of them have names. New ones are discovered regularly by NASA's Cassini probe. But this doesn't explain rings on other planets in our solar system, such as Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus, which probably formed in a different way, Canup said. The rings and ice-rich inner moons are the last surviving remnants of this lost moon, "which is pretty neat," Canup said. Burns said Canup's theory explains the heavy ice components of rings better than other possibilities. Larry Esposito, who discovered one of Saturn's rings, praised the new paper as "a very clever, original idea." "I would call it more like cosmic recycling," Esposito said because the moon became rings which then became moons. "It's not so much a final demise, but a cosmic effort to reuse materials again and again." ___ Online: Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature/ NASA on Saturn's moons:
http://tinyurl.com/28rn3ln
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