Cassini probe at Saturn... (warning -- large images!)

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Dudes, it's METHANE RAIN and -180 degrees. It ain't earth. (OR IS IT??)

It's ROCHESTER, NY!

DOQQUN (donut), Friday, 5 May 2006 19:30 (seventeen years ago) link

NOIZEMOON

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 5 May 2006 20:10 (seventeen years ago) link

Ooh pretty. Good of Penn Jillette to do the narration too.

robster (robster), Friday, 5 May 2006 21:41 (seventeen years ago) link

nine months pass...
a movie of cassini crossing the ring plane

Lingbert, Saturday, 3 March 2007 19:38 (seventeen years ago) link

four months pass...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6908190.stm

another moon, only 2km in diam. are these really worth classing as moons i ask yer. Aren't they just spin-offs from the ring of rocks?

Ste, Friday, 20 July 2007 15:33 (sixteen years ago) link

Well but they're special rocks.

Ned Raggett, Saturday, 21 July 2007 00:24 (sixteen years ago) link

special as in olympics?

StanM, Saturday, 21 July 2007 00:25 (sixteen years ago) link

one month passes...

Images coming in from yesterday's close flyby of Iapetus

http://www.planetary.org/image/iapetus_cassini_20070910_SATUSHINE001_PRIME_colormos_lg.jpg

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 12 September 2007 00:05 (sixteen years ago) link

these are kind of creepy.

31g, Wednesday, 12 September 2007 02:40 (sixteen years ago) link

six months pass...

More evidence for Titan having a subsurface ocean

Ned Raggett, Friday, 21 March 2008 03:45 (sixteen years ago) link

three weeks pass...

Late late mission barnstorming over Saturn

Although the first mission extension for Cassini hasn't officially been approved yet by NASA Headquarters (which strikes me as being kind of silly, since the primary mission comes to a close in less than two months!!), the mission is already trying to figure out what to do beyond the two-year proposed Extended Mission. Last week there was a meeting of the Outer Planets Assessment Group, and Cassini's Deputy Project Scientist, Linda Spilker, gave a presentation on what to expect from the extended missions (here it is, in PDF format, well worth a look). There was a lot of stuff about the science to be expected from the extended mission, and a proposal for an extended-extended mission, but the real stunner was a scenario she presented for Cassini's end-of-life: to spend the very, very last phase of the mission in an orbit that threads Cassini between Saturn's cloud tops and the innermost D ring.

Folks, the gap between Saturn and the D ring is only about 3,000 kilometers wide. I suppose for a mission to a place like Mars, 3,000 kilometers of leeway is quite a lot. But Saturn is 120,000 kilometers across, and the main ring system extends another 60,000 kilometers or so above Saturn; Cassini would have to do an orbital maneuver to majorly drop its periapsis (closest approach point) to right in between the planet and its rings, leaping over the main ring system in the process. The idea seems totally crazy.

Elvis Telecom, Sunday, 13 April 2008 02:30 (sixteen years ago) link

Crazy... and AWESOME

Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved, Sunday, 13 April 2008 02:49 (sixteen years ago) link

That needs to happen. (Like they've got anything to lose!)

Ned Raggett, Monday, 14 April 2008 05:04 (sixteen years ago) link

god that would be incredible

strgn, Monday, 14 April 2008 05:55 (sixteen years ago) link

beautiful thread btw

strgn, Monday, 14 April 2008 05:55 (sixteen years ago) link

Go for another two years

The US space agency (Nasa) has extended the international Cassini-Huygens mission by two years.

The unmanned Cassini-Huygens spacecraft entered orbit around Saturn in 2004 on a mission that was supposed to come to an end in July this year.

The two-year mission extension will encompass some 60 extra orbits of Saturn and more flybys of its moons.
These will include 26 flybys of Titan - its biggest moon - seven of Enceladus, and one each of Dione, Rhea and Helene

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 17:06 (sixteen years ago) link

three months pass...

Looking for life in Enceladus’ plume

Now in press at Astrobiology is a look at the possibilities of life on Enceladus that holds out hope for detecting biomarkers with data gathered during a Cassini flyby. That’s an exciting possibility, depending as it does not on an orbiter or lander mission from an indefinite future but on equipment we’ve currently got in Saturn space. And the Enceladus picture remains fascinating because of the possibility that some microbial systems on Earth that operate far beneath the surface may offer examples of how life could evolve on a cold and distant moon of Saturn.

We’ve already found a dozen icy particle jets coming out of Enceladus’ south polar regions, all pumping material into a plume that extends for thousands of kilometers. A 2005 Cassini flyby revealed, among other things, water vapor, methane and simple organic compounds, even as other Cassini instrumentation showed the moon’s south polar region to be anomalously warm. If there is liquid water under the south polar region, could life have evolved there? If so, the paper raises the possibility that methane may be a biomarker. For that matter, could life have come there from elsewhere? The paper argues both are possible:

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 16 July 2008 20:39 (fifteen years ago) link

Also, http://twitter.com/CassiniSaturn

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 16 July 2008 21:48 (fifteen years ago) link

TWITTER HAS GONE TOO FAR

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 16 July 2008 21:50 (fifteen years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Lakes on Titan!

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 31 July 2008 16:16 (fifteen years ago) link

awesome we can go hydrocarbon-skiing.

Jarlrmai, Thursday, 31 July 2008 16:26 (fifteen years ago) link

eight months pass...

That is so way cool. Thanks!

James Morrison, Tuesday, 14 April 2009 03:55 (fifteen years ago) link

two months pass...

For any London ILXors or folks visiting, great looking exhibition of Cassini images at the Royal Observatory:

Visions of Saturn

Bill A, Wednesday, 24 June 2009 13:47 (fourteen years ago) link

Stronger hints of an ocean inside Enceladus

PASADENA, Calif. -- For the first time, scientists working on NASA's Cassini mission have detected sodium salts in ice grains of Saturn's outermost ring. Detecting salty ice indicates that Saturn's moon Enceladus, which primarily replenishes the ring with material from discharging jets, could harbor a reservoir of liquid water -- perhaps an ocean -- beneath its surface.

Cassini discovered the water-ice jets in 2005 on Enceladus. These jets expel tiny ice grains and vapor, some of which escape the moon's gravity and form Saturn's outermost ring. Cassini's cosmic dust analyzer has examined the composition of those grains and found salt within them.

"We believe that the salty minerals deep inside Enceladus washed out from rock at the bottom of a liquid layer," said Frank Postberg, Cassini scientist for the cosmic dust analyzer at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, Germany. Postberg is lead author of a study that appears in the June 25 issue of the journal Nature.

Scientists on Cassini's cosmic dust detector team conclude that liquid water must be present because it is the only way to dissolve the significant amounts of minerals that would account for the levels of salt detected. The process of sublimation, the mechanism by which vapor is released directly from solid ice in the crust, cannot account for the presence of salt.

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 24 June 2009 21:52 (fourteen years ago) link

one month passes...

Plains of Titan to be Named for Dune novels

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 5 August 2009 06:46 (fourteen years ago) link

The US Geological Survey Astrogeology Science Center announced the first plain or "planitia" given a name will be designated as Chusuk Planitia. Chusuk was a planet from the Dune series, known for its musical instruments.

http://images2.wikia.nocookie.net/dune/images/thumb/2/26/Baliset.jpg/180px-Baliset.jpg

weatheringdaleson, Wednesday, 5 August 2009 07:23 (fourteen years ago) link

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/files/2009/08/cassini_fring_punch.jpg

Weird.

This image, taken as Saturn approaches its August 2009 equinox, shows a shadow being cast by a narrow, vertically extended feature in the F ring.

Imaging scientists are working to understand the origin of structures such as this one, but they think this image may show the shadow of an object on an inclined orbit which has punched through the F ring and dragged material along in its path.

Elvis Telecom, Monday, 10 August 2009 18:08 (fourteen years ago) link

Must be escapees from the prison colony.

Nate Carson, Monday, 10 August 2009 20:57 (fourteen years ago) link

two months pass...

Cassini made it's closest pass to Enceladus yet over the weekend and the pictures are knocking me out of my tree. Raw image download.

If you can only look at one, make it this one

Elvis Telecom, Tuesday, 3 November 2009 02:24 (fourteen years ago) link

YES

the jun togawa of farting (╓abies), Tuesday, 3 November 2009 02:28 (fourteen years ago) link

one month passes...

Ummm, WOW!

http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/moons/images/PIA12481-br500.jpg

Reflection of Sunlight off Titan Lake
December 17, 2009 Full-Res: PIA12481

This image shows the first flash of sunlight reflected off a lake on Saturn’s moon Titan. The glint off a mirror-like surface is known as a specular reflection. This kind of glint was detected by the visual and infrared mapping spectrometer (VIMS) on NASA’s Cassini spacecraft on July 8, 2009. It confirmed the presence of liquid in the moon’s northern hemisphere, where lakes are more numerous and larger than those in the southern hemisphere. Scientists using VIMS had confirmed the presence of liquid in Ontario Lacus, the largest lake in the southern hemisphere, in 2008.

The northern hemisphere was shrouded in darkness for nearly 15 years, but the sun began to illuminate the area again as it approached its spring equinox in August 2009. VIMS was able to detect the glint as the viewing geometry changed. Titan’s hazy atmosphere also scatters and absorbs many wavelengths of light, including most of the visible light spectrum. But the VIMS instrument enabled scientists to look for the glint in infrared wavelengths that were able to penetrate through the moon’s atmosphere. This image was created using wavelengths of light in the 5 micron range.

By comparing the new image to radar and near-infrared light images acquired from 2006 to 2008, Cassini scientists were able to correlate the reflection to the southern shoreline of a Titan lake called Kraken Mare. The sprawling Kraken Mare covers about 400,000 square kilometers (150,000 square miles). The reflection appeared to come from a part of the lake around 71 degrees north latitude and 337 degrees west latitude.

Elvis Telecom, Thursday, 17 December 2009 21:39 (fourteen years ago) link

Insane. (And great.)

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 17 December 2009 22:12 (fourteen years ago) link

Wow--that is so amazing. Now we just need some methane-breathing Titan native wildlife to start flying around visibly in the atmosphere.

Attention please, a child has been lost in the tunnel of goats. (James Morrison), Thursday, 17 December 2009 22:31 (fourteen years ago) link

I know this is stating the obvious, but the fact that this little probe is flying round out there, taking these amazing shots, and it's all being uploaded straight on the net for us to gawk at---there's not an aspect of this that doesn't blow my mind.

Attention please, a child has been lost in the tunnel of goats. (James Morrison), Thursday, 17 December 2009 22:57 (fourteen years ago) link

Britain cut all its funding for this mission yesterday : (

caek, Thursday, 17 December 2009 23:22 (fourteen years ago) link

Srsly, that kind of fucking short-sighted idiocy is the *true* Broken Britain that the tossers who make these decisions likely rail against.

Back to the positive - amazing new pictures, this thread continues to be wholeheartedly For The Ages.

Bill A, Thursday, 17 December 2009 23:33 (fourteen years ago) link

Britain cut all its funding for this mission yesterday : (

Britain clobbered it's funding for all of astronomy and physics yesterday. http://www.saveastronomy.org.uk/ is tracking the damage. (This is probably worth a different thread. Back to the amazing Saturn info)

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 18 December 2009 00:46 (fourteen years ago) link

Just realized that I forgot to post this

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2009/12/15/science/15obmoon_ready/articleInline.jpg

December 15, 2009
Solving a Tonal Mystery in Orbit Around Saturn
By HENRY FOUNTAIN

Researchers have solved what may be the oldest mystery in planetary science: the two-tone surface of Saturn’s moon Iapetus.

The odd feature — the moon’s trailing side is about 10 times brighter than its leading side — has been a mystery since it was first observed by Giovanni Cassini in 1671. In two papers published online by Science, researchers have unraveled the mystery, using images and data from instruments aboard the spacecraft named for Cassini.

The studies confirm an earlier idea that dust, most likely from another of Saturn’s moons, falls on the leading side of Iapetus as it orbits the planet.

“It’s just like a motorcyclist, who only gets the flies on the leading side of the helmet rather than the trailing side,” said Tillmann Denk of the Free University of Berlin, an author with John R. Spencer of the Southwest Research Institute of one of the papers and lead author of the other.

But the pattern of the surface features — the dark area extends to the trailing side at the equator, for example — is not fully explained by the deposition dust. Rather, the researchers say, the reason has a lot to do with the moon’s rotation on its axis, which takes 80 earth days.

Such a slow rotation (“midday” lasts for a couple of weeks) allows the distant Sun to warm the dark dust-covered areas enough that water ice becomes vapor.

The vapor migrates elsewhere, freezing to ice again when it reaches colder areas. The areas where the ice was lost become darker, and those that gained ice become brighter.

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 18 December 2009 01:06 (fourteen years ago) link

Just as FYI, put feed://ciclops.org/rssfeed.php into your RSS feed reader for daily Saturn images and updates on what's going on.

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 18 December 2009 08:59 (fourteen years ago) link

Being kind of amazed by these photos of the rings:
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/photos/imagedetails/index.cfm?imageId=3774
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/photos/imagedetails/index.cfm?imageId=3779

I mean, I've always grown up seeing paintings and raytracings and so on which look exactly like that, but this time you have to stop and go, actually, this is real, this is a photo.

brett favre vs bernard fevre, fite (a passing spacecadet), Friday, 18 December 2009 09:20 (fourteen years ago) link

Titan's haze and clouds are well-known but there's fog now too

Astronomers say the presence of fog provides the first direct evidence for the exchange of material between the surface and the atmosphere, and thus of an active hydrological cycle, which previously had only been known to exist on Earth.

The discovery was made using data from the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) onboard the Cassini spacecraft, which has been observing Saturn's system for the past five years. The VIMS instrument provides "hyperspectral" imaging, covering a large swath of the visible and infrared spectrum.

Researchers investigated all Cassini data collected over the moon's south pole from October 2006 through March 2007, and filtered the data to separate out features occurring at different depths in the atmosphere, ranging from 20 kilometers (12.4 miles) to .25 kilometers (820 feet) above the surface. Using other filters, they homed in on "bright" features caused by the scattering of light off small particles—such as the methane droplets present in clouds.

In this way, they isolated clouds located about 750 meters (less than a half-mile) above the ground. These clouds did not extend into the higher altitudes—into the moon's troposphere, where regular clouds form. In other words, says Brown, they had found fog.

"Fog—or clouds, or dew, or condensation in general—can form whenever air reaches about 100 percent humidity," Brown says. "There are two ways to get there. The first is obvious: add water (on Earth) or methane (on Titan) to the surrounding air. The second is much more common: make the air colder so it can hold less water (or liquid methane), and all of that excess needs to condense."

On Earth, this is the most common method of making fog, Brown says. "That fog you often see at sunrise hugging the ground is caused by ground-level air cooling overnight, to the point where it cannot hang onto its water. As the sun rises and the air heats, the fog goes away."

Similarly, fog can form when wet air passes over cold ground; as the air cools, the water condenses. And mountain fog occurs when air gets pushed up the side of a mountain and cools, causing the water to condense.

However, none of these mechanisms work on Titan.

The reason is that Titan's muggy atmosphere takes a notoriously long time to cool (or warm). "If you were to turn the sun totally off, Titan's atmosphere would still take something like 100 years to cool down," Brown says. "Even the coldest parts of the surface are much too warm to ever cause fog to condense."

Mountain fog is also out of the question, he adds. "A Titanian mountain would have to be about 15,000 feet high before the air would get cold enough to condense," he says. And yet the tallest mountains the moon could possibly carry (because of its fragile, icy crust) would be no more than 3000 feet high.

The only possible way to make Titanian fog, then, is to add humidity to the air. And the only way to do that, Brown says, is by evaporating liquid—in this case, methane, the most common hydrocarbon on the moon, which exists in solid, liquid, and gaseous forms.

Brown notes that evaporating methane on Titan "means it must have rained, and rain means streams and pools and erosion and geology. The presence of fog on Titan proves, for the first time, that the moon has a currently active methane hydrological cycle."

The presence of fog also proves that the moon must be dotted with methane pools, Brown says. That's because any ground-level air, after becoming 100 percent humid and turning into fog, would instantly rise up into the atmosphere like a giant cumulus cloud. "The only way to make the fog stick around on the ground is to both add humidity and cool the air just a little," he explains. "The way to cool the air just a little is to have it in contact with something cold, like a pool of evaporating liquid methane."

Elvis Telecom, Tuesday, 22 December 2009 03:36 (fourteen years ago) link

one month passes...

So remember those spokes in the B-ring of Saturn? They're 100% water ice

http://www.universetoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/spokes-b-ring-2.jpg

Elvis Telecom, Monday, 1 February 2010 00:24 (fourteen years ago) link

A nicely banal answer (not everything needs to be mysterious!)

Ned Raggett, Monday, 1 February 2010 01:42 (fourteen years ago) link

And Cassini is go to keep on going (potentially through 2017)

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 3 February 2010 19:57 (fourteen years ago) link

No trench no credibility

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 16 February 2010 23:19 (fourteen years ago) link


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