Shepherds Fly

  Two of Saturn’s smaller moons pass by Cassini’s wide-angle camera in this animation sequence, made from 60 raw images taken on May 26, 2009. Prometheus enters first, stage right, deforming the ringlets of the F ring with its gravity, and is followed shortly after by Atlas, taking the inside track around the edge of…

Ripples Have Ridges

  Another great image showing Saturn’s moon Daphnis sending up high-walled waves in the ring material edging the Keeler Gap in which it resides. The waves cast shadows back onto the A ring, as does the moon itself. This image was taken on May 24, 2009 by the Cassini spacecraft. RAW image: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Craternator

  A large-scale crater rides the terminator between day and night on Dione, a 700-mile-wide moon of Saturn. The moon’s signature “wispy lines” can be seen on the sunlit side. These are long fractures in the moon’s surface, exposed ice-covered cliffs hundreds of feet high. Scientists believe they indicate past tectonic activity, or possibly the…

Eclipsing Mimas

  This animation, made from a series of 8 raw images taken by Cassini on May 14, shows Saturn’s moon Mimas being eclipsed by another object…..a neighboring moon, perhaps? It’s not mentioned, but it definitely seems to be something of similar size, and round. Mimas is best characterized by its large-scale Herschel crater in its…

Into the Shadows

  Saturn’s shadow falls upon  its rings in this image acquired by Cassini on March 20, 2009. Reflected light from the southern hemisphere of the planet illuminates part of the normally transparent C ring, silhouetting the ring segments there. This image is an approximate true-color view of the planet and rings as might be seen…

Wave Rider

  4.3-mile-wide Daphnis races along its track, the 26-mile-wide Keeler Gap in Saturn’s A ring, stirring up sinuous edge waves in the ring material behind and before it. Not only does the shepherd moon cast a small shadow onto the ring, but so do the crests of the waves it’s creating! It’s a wonderful little…

Trekking to Titan

  For any of you who’ve seen the new Star Trek film by director J.J. Abrams, you know what I’m talking about. For those of you who haven’t (yet), there’s a few spoilers here so…read at your own risk 🙂   I’m not the biggest fan of Star Trek, there being so many more people…

Capturing Pan’s Shadow

  Cassini took this photo yesterday, May 9th, as 16-mile-wide shepherd moon Pan passed along its path through the Encke Gap. Its shadow falls upon the A ring, pointing toward Saturn. (I colored the image to approximate visible light coloration based on other true-color calibrations. The original raw image can be seen here.) Pan is…

Through the Clouds

  A background star is caught within Titan’s atmosphere, as seen by Cassini during its May 5 flyby, seemingly trapped between the cloudtops and high haze layer that surrounds the moon. Eventually the star sinks behind the enshrouding clouds, its light eclipsed by the moon. See image at right. These images are raw and uncalibrated….

A Hazy Shade of Titan

Cassini looks down onto Titan’s north pole, its camera revealing the high-level atmospheric haze that encircles the 3,200-mile-wide moon. This image was shot in visible violet light on March 27, 2009, using Cassini’s wide-angle camera. The spacecraft was 122,000 miles away from Titan at the time. The sunlit part of Titan is the side that…

Sister, Sister

  Cassini turns its camera towards the Pleiades, a familiar star cluster often called the Seven Sisters. Actually containing much more than seven stars (look at it through binoculars some time!) the Pleiades consists of many young, hot blue stars in close arrangement approximately 440 light-years from our solar system. They can be seen easily…

Shadow Facts

  A moon’s shadow falls upon ring after ring in this image, taken on April 29 by Cassini.  Varying brightnesses and compositions of ring segments scatter light differently, as shown above. With Saturn’s spring equinox (August 11) getting closer every day, the ringplane – and orbital plane of many of its moons – are approaching a perpendicular…