Saturn’s rings are no more than 400 million years old – much younger than the planet which formed more than four billion years ago, according to physicists.
Researchers used data gathered from Nasa spacecraft Cassini, which was destroyed via a controlled crash in 2017, studying the grains of rocky material that pass through the solar system.
This is because, sometimes, a thin layer of this cosmic dust is left behind on planetary bodies, including on the ice that makes up Saturn’s rings.
The researchers wanted to see how rapidly this dust builds up around the rings, which would then offer clues on their age – much “like telling how old a house is by running your finger along its surfaces”, according to the team.
They calculated that the rings have likely been gathering dust for only a few hundred million years.
“If you have a clean carpet laid out, you just have to wait.
“Dust will settle on your carpet. The same is true for the rings.”
Saturn has seven rings mostly made up of countless chunks of ice, with small amounts of rocky matter.
This ice stretches nearly 175,000 miles from the planet’s surface and has a total mass that is nearly 5,000 times less massive than Earth’s moon.
First observed by Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei in 1610, the origins of Saturn’s rings have remained a mystery.
In the 1800s, Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell concluded that they were made up of many individual pieces rather solid, concentric ringlets.
For the study, the researchers looked at data from Cassini’s Cosmic Dust Analyser instrument.
Researchers said their work, published in the journal Science Advances, is the strongest evidence yet that Saturn’s rings are “remarkably young”.
Until recently, it was thought that the rings were around 4.5 billion years old – the same age as the planet.
Prof Kempf said: “In a way, we’ve gotten closure on a question that started with James Clerk Maxwell.”
However, experts believe that these rings might already be vanishing.
Previous research from Nasa scientists reported the ice is slowly raining down onto the planet and could disappear entirely in another 100 million years.
And the origins of the rings still remain a mystery.
Prof Kempf said: “We know approximately how old the rings are, but it doesn’t solve any of our other problems.
“We still don’t know how these rings formed in the first place.”