Titanic images, groovy shots: Cassini arrives at Saturn.After a 7-year, 3.5-billion-mile journey, the Cassini spacecraft last week slipped through a gap between two of the icy rings circling Saturn and became the first spacecraft to orbit the distant planet. The probe, which will tour Saturn and many of its 31 known moons for at least 4 years, has already returned stunning images of the shimmering shim·mer intr.v. shim·mered, shim·mer·ing, shim·mers 1. To shine with a subdued flickering light. See Synonyms at flash. 2. rings and recorded the sharpest images ever taken of smog-covered Titan, Saturn's largest moon. "The images are mind-boggling," says Cassini imaging team leader Carolyn Porco Carolyn C. Porco is an American planetary scientist and the leader of the imaging science team on the Cassini mission[1],[2],[3] presently in orbit around Saturn. of the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo. In Cassini's snapshots, striations within the rings resemble grooves in a vinyl phonograph record See turntable and LP. . Many of the images show wavelike features that form when the gravity of a passing moon perturbs icy particles in a ring. Depending on the moon's orientation relative to the ring's plane, the interaction either forces icy ring particles to clump into bands or pulls them up and down into corrugations. Such features had already been spied in the early 1980s by the two Voyager spacecraft, which flew past Saturn, but the new Cassini images show the structures in far finer detail. Although most of the rings are composed of virtually pure water ice, a spectrometer on Cassini found that particles in the F ring, the sixth ring discovered, as well as those in the rings' gaps, have a small dirt component with a composition resembling that of Saturn's outlying moon, Phoebe, notes Roger Clark Roger Albert Clark, MBE, (August 5, 1939–January 12, 1998) was a British rally driver during the 1960s and '70s, and the first competitor from his country to win a World Rally Championship (WRC) event when he triumphed at the 1976 RAC Rally. of the U.S. Geological Survey The term geological survey can be used to describe both the conduct of a survey for geological purposes and an institution holding geological information. A geological survey in Denver. The similarity supports a theory in which the rings and Phoebe have a common origin. Scientists have suggested that the rings may be the shattered remains of one or more bodies that once resided in an icy reservoir at the outskirts of the solar system solar system, the sun and the surrounding planets, natural satellites, dwarf planets, asteroids, meteoroids, and comets that are bound by its gravity. The sun is by far the most massive part of the solar system, containing almost 99.9% of the system's total mass. but were captured and torn apart by Saturn's gravity about 100 million years ago. Phoebe, which Cassini imaged last month (SN: 6/19/04, p. 387), may be an intact member of this same icy reservoir. Flying within 339,000 kilometers of Titan on July 2, Cassini gave scientists their closest, albeit fuzzy, look at the surface of this enigmatic moon. Viewing Titan at infrared wavelengths, which can penetrate the moon's thick haze, Cassini resolved some features as small as 10 km across. The new observations show a field of methane clouds near Titan's south pole that were first seen in ground-based images from 1999. The Cassini images reveal that the clouds change shape in a matter of hours. When a cloud grows smaller, it may be raining methane down on Titan's surface, says Alfred McEwen of the University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service. in Tucson. That would dovetail dovetail (dov´tāl), n a widened or fanned-out portion of a prepared cavity, usually established deliberately to increase the retention and resistance form. with a theory that Titan contains lakes or ponds of hydrocarbons. During its mission, Cassini will pass by Titan another 45 times, coming as close as 950 km. The nearest sweep is expected to resolve features one-hundredth as small as those seen in the July 2 flyby fly·by also fly-by n. pl. fly·bys A flight passing close to a specified target or position, especially a maneuver in which a spacecraft or satellite passes sufficiently close to a body to make detailed observations without . In January, Cassini's instrument-laden Huygens probe will plunge through Titan's atmosphere. |
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