| Cassini Mission to Saturn Continues to Make Discoveries | | Print | |
| Written by James Heiser | ||||||||
| Wednesday, 21 October 2009 17:15 | ||||||||
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The mission reached its indisputable “high point” with the release and descent of the Huygens probe to the surface of Titan, one of Saturn’s moons. The images of Titan were among some of the most significant in the history of America’s space program since the successes of the Viking landers on Mars in the 1970s. Cassini completed its initial four-year mission to explore the Saturn System in June 2008. Now, the healthy spacecraft is working overtime on the Cassini Equinox Mission, seeking answer to new questions raised in Cassini’s first years at Saturn. Many repeat visits are planned for Cassini at the moons Titan and Enceladus – both important targets of the Equinox Mission. Among the latest discoveries are strange patches of color on five of Saturn’s moons. According to Space.com: Some of the patterns have been seen before, but others took scientists by surprise, suggesting dynamic interactions between the moons and other particles orbiting around Saturn. The maps of Mimas, Enceladus, Tethys, Dione, and Rhea were created from images taken by NASA's Cassini spacecraft and were presented by Paul Schenk of Houston's Lunar and Planetary Institute at a recent meeting of the American Astronomical Society.... Some of the most striking patterns are revealed when the brightness of the surface in infrared light is divided by the brightness in the ultraviolet part of the spectrum, which gives the so-called redness of the surface. The maps reveal that except for Mimas, all the inner moons are redder on their trailing hemispheres. This reddening is strongest at the centers of the trailing face (like the center of a bulls-eye). The leading faces of the moons also appear to be redder in their centers, though the redness is weaker than for the trailing hemisphere. Seeing this pattern on both hemispheres is difficult to explain because most processes that would color the surface in this way would only affect one hemisphere or the other. Scientists are presently exploring several possible explanations to account for the strange coloration, including debris from one of Saturn’s rings. Other phenomena, however, are even more surprising: Another surprise was the discovery of a very narrow and straight band of discrete ultraviolet-bright features very close to Rhea's equator. At higher resolution, the band appears as bluish splotch-marks that form a very narrow chain only a few kilometers wide across the center of the leading hemisphere of Rhea. These features are seen on no other icy satellite of Saturn. Cassini’s next encounter will be with the moon Enceladus on November 2.
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Bonnie
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... And all these amazing discoveries benefit me by... what? I don't mind people trying to satisfy their own curiosity. I just wish they would do it with their own dime. |
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William the Lesser
said:
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Why is TNA shilling for space corporatism? A decade or so ago, Joseph Sobran wrote an endorsement for TNA that commended the publication for examining public issues from a constitutionalist perspective. Things have changed, haven't they? Of course, after writing that blurb Sobran was banished from the TNA masthead because, as a non-Birch employee, he didn't think TNA and JBS had the right to dictate to him regarding the sale of his syndicated column and other business matters that were none of Appleton' business. |
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Launched in 1997, the Cassini probe to Saturn completed its initial four-year mission in June 2008. The trip from Earth to Saturn took roughly seven years and entailed 2.2 billion miles. Although Cassini's nuclear power supply caused a brief 
