Saturnian rings ‹satelloids› - significado y definición. Qué es Saturnian rings ‹satelloids›
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Qué (quién) es Saturnian rings ‹satelloids› - definición

METRE IN EARLY ROMAN POETRY
Saturnian Verse; Saturnian Metre; Saturnian meter

Rings (gymnastics)         
  • [[Courtney Tulloch]] competing at the [[2015 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships]]
ARTISTIC GYMNASTICS APPARATUS
Gymnastics Rings; Gymnastics rings; Still rings; Still Rings; Felge; Gymnastic rings; Gymnastic ring; Rings (apparatus); Artistic rings; Artistic Rings; Crucifix (exercise); Calisthenics rings; Gymnast rings
The rings, also known as still rings (in contrast to flying rings), is an artistic gymnastics apparatus and the event that uses it. It is traditionally used only by male gymnasts, due to its extreme upper body strength requirements.
Rings of Saturn         
  • Propeller moonlet Santos-Dumont from lit (top) and unlit sides of rings
  • Detail of Galileo's drawing of [[Saturn]] in a letter to Belisario Vinta (1610)
  • ''Cassini'' space probe view of the unilluminated side of Saturn's rings (May 9, 2007).
  • Mimas]].
  • Near Saturn's equinox, Daphnis and its waves cast shadows on the A Ring.
  • Location of the first four moonlets detected in the A ring.
  • Huygens' ring theory in ''Systema Saturnium'' (1659)
  • Spitzer]] image of part of the ring
  • Pan]]'s orbit, implying its particles oscillate in [[horseshoe orbit]]s.
  • View of the outer C Ring; the Maxwell Gap with the Maxwell Ringlet on its right side are above and right of center. The Bond Gap is above a broad light band towards the upper right; the Dawes Gap is within a dark band just below the upper right corner.
  • The small moons Pandora (left) and Prometheus (right) orbit on either side of the F ring. Prometheus acts as a ring shepherd and is followed by dark channels that it has [http://ciclops.org/view.php?id=3806 carved] into the inner strands of the ring.
  • gallery]]).
  • Anthe]]
  • E]] rings.
  • A ''Cassini'' image of the faint D Ring, with the inner C Ring below
  • The Roche Division (passing through image center) between the A Ring and the narrow F Ring. Atlas can be seen within it. The Encke and Keeler gaps are also visible.
  • The illuminated side of Saturn's rings with the major subdivisions labeled
  • F Ring]].
  • C Ring]] is just inside the B Ring.
  • A 2007 artist impression of the aggregates of icy particles that form the 'solid' portions of Saturn's rings. These elongated clumps are continually forming and dispersing. The largest particles are a few meters across.
  • The outer rings seen back-illuminated by the [[Sun]]
  • Lo-res version of this video]]
  • Simulated appearance of Saturn as seen from Earth over the course of one Saturn year
  • radio-occultation]]-derived particle size data. The [[attenuation]] of 0.94-, 3.6-, and 13-cm signals sent by ''Cassini'' through the rings to Earth shows abundance of particles of sizes similar to or larger than those wavelengths. Purple (B, inner A Ring) means few particles are <&nbsp;5 cm (all signals similarly attenuated). Green and blue (C, outer A Ring) mean particles <&nbsp;5 cm and <&nbsp;1 cm, respectively, are common. White areas (B Ring) are too dense to transmit adequate signal. Other evidence shows rings A to C have a broad range of particle sizes, up to m across.
PLANAR ASSEMBLAGE OF ICY PARTICLES ORBITING SATURN
Cassini Division; Encke Division; Encke gap; Encke division; R/2004 S 1; A Ring; B Ring; Crepe Ring; C Ring; D Ring; F Ring; F ring; S/2004 1R; R/2004 S 2; Saturn's rings; Keeler Gap; Keeler gap; Cassini division; Rings of saturn; Maxwell Gap; Saturns rings; Encke Gap; Maxwell Division; Keeler Division; Rings Of Saturn; Crepe ring; Phoebe ring; C-Ring; Propeller moonlet; Bleriot (moonlet); Bleriot (moon); Saturn ring; C Ring of Saturn; E Ring of Saturn; F Ring of Saturn; Methone Ring Arc; Huygens Gap; Huygens Ringlet; Saturn's Rings; Saturnian rings; Saturn rings; Saturn Ring System; Ring system of Saturn; Saturnian Ring System; Ring System of Saturn; Saturn's ring system; Saturn's Ring System; Saturnian ring system; Saturn ring system; Saturn Rings; Saturnian Rings; Phoebe Ring; Saturn’s rings; Roche Division; Janus/Epimetheus Ring; Janus Ring; Epimetheus Ring; A Ring (ring of Saturn); C Ring (ring of Saturn); B Ring (ring of Saturn); D Ring (ring of Saturn); E Ring (ring of Saturn); Colombo Ringlet; G Ring (ring of Saturn); F Ring (ring of Saturn); Colombo Gap; Methone ring arc; Anthe ring arc; Titan Ringlet; Pallene ring; Maxwell Ringlet; Earhart (moon); Earhart (moonlet); Santos-Dumont (moon); Santos-Dumont (moonlet); Saturn's Ring
The rings of Saturn are the most extensive ring system of any planet in the Solar System. They consist of countless small particles, ranging in size from micrometers to meters, that orbit around Saturn.
Saturnian         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Saturnian (disambiguation); Saturnial
·adj Of or pertaining to the planet Saturn; as, the Saturnian year.
II. Saturnian ·adj Hence: Resembling the golden age; distinguished for peacefulness, happiness, contentment.
III. Saturnian ·adj Of or pertaining to Saturn, whose age or reign, from the mildness and wisdom of his government, is called the golden age.
IV. Saturnian ·noun Any one of numerous species of large handsome moths belonging to Saturnia and allied genera. The luna moth, polyphemus, and promethea, are examples. They belong to the Silkworn family, and some are raised for their silk. ·see Polyphemus.

Wikipedia

Saturnian (poetry)

Saturnian meter or verse is an old Latin and Italic poetic form, of which the principles of versification have become obscure. Only 132 complete uncontroversial verses survive. 95 literary verses and partial fragments have been preserved as quotations in later grammatical writings, as well as 37 verses in funerary or dedicatory inscriptions. The majority of literary Saturnians come from the Odysseia (more commonly known as the Odissia or Odyssia), a translation/paraphrase of Homer's Odyssey by Livius Andronicus (c. 3rd century BC), and the Bellum Poenicum, an epic on the First Punic War by Gnaeus Naevius (c. 3rd century BC).

The meter was moribund by the time of the literary verses and forgotten altogether by classical times, falling out of use with the adoption of the hexameter and other Greek verse forms. Quintus Ennius is the poet who is generally credited with introducing the Greek hexameter in Latin, and dramatic meters seem to have been well on their way to domestic adoption in the works of his approximate contemporary Plautus. These Greek verse forms were considered more sophisticated than the native tradition; Horace called the Saturnian horridus. Consequently, the poetry in this meter was not preserved. Cicero regretted the loss in his Brutus:

Atque utinam exstārent illa carmina, quae multīs saeclīs ante suam aetātem in epulīs esse cantitāta ā singulīs conuīuīs dē clārōrum uirōrum laudibus in Orīginibus scrīptum relīquit Catō.
'I heartily wish those venerable Odes were still extant, which Cato informs us in his Antiquities, used to be sung by every guest in his turn at the homely feasts of our ancestors, many ages before, to commemorate the feats of their heroes.'

However, it has been noted that later poets like Ennius (by extension Virgil, who follows him in both time and technique) preserve something of the Saturnian aesthetic in hexameter verse. Ennius explicitly acknowledges Naevius' poem and skill (lines 206–7 and 208–9 in the edition of Skutsch, with translations by Goldberg):

[...] scrīpsēre aliī rem
vorsibus quōs ōlim Faunei vātesque canēbant
'[...] Others have given an account
in rhythms which the Fauns and seers sang.'
nam neque Mūsārum scopulōs ēscendit ad altōs
nec dictī studiōsus fuit Rōmānus homō ante hunc.
'For no Roman scaled the Muses' lofty crags
or was careful with his speech before this man.'

Ancient grammarians sought to derive the verse from a Greek model, in which syllable weight or the arrangement of light and heavy syllables was the governing principle. Scholars today remain divided between two approaches:

  1. The meter was quantitative (but not borrowed from Greek).
  2. The meter was accentual or based on accented and unaccented syllables.

Despite the division, there is some consensus regarding aspects of the verse's structure. A Saturnian line can be divided into two cola or half-lines, separated by a central caesura. The second colon is shorter than or as long as the first. Furthermore, in any half-line with seven or more syllables, the last three or four are preceded by word-end. This is known as Korsch's caesura or the caesura Korschiana, after its discoverer.