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New Enceladus Closeups Now Arriving

Alan MacRobert

August 14, 2008: For a few seconds on Monday (August 11, 2008) the diehard Cassini spacecraft skimmed only 50 kilometres above the surface of Saturn's little moon Enceladus, which leaped to the forefront of solar-system studies when Cassini discovered active ice geysers spraying from it in 2005. The data are streaming back, and NASA is posting the preliminary raw images.

"Cassini focused its cameras and other remote sensing instruments on Enceladus with an emphasis on the moon's south pole" says a NASA press release, "where parallel stripes or fissures dubbed 'tiger stripes' line the region. That area is of particular interest because geysers of water-ice and vapour jet out of the fissures and supply material to Saturn's E ring."

Check the NASA Cassini site for the latest. And see imaging team leader Carolyn Porco's blog post.

"Two more Enceladus flybys are planned for October," notes the NASA release. "The first of those will cut Monday's flyby distance in half and bring the spacecraft to a remarkable 25 kilometres from the surface." A resolution of 3.7 metres per pixel should be achieved.

 

 

 

 

This is a small piece of an image taken by Cassini when the spacecraft was 2,600 kilometres above the surface. The image scale is approximately 20 metres per pixel. NASA / JPL / Space Science Institute