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Cassini Spacecraft gets a closer look of the Saturn’s moon Dione

June 20, 2015 By Stephen Kenwright Leave a Comment

DioneNASA’s Cassini spacecraft has zoomed in one of the moon of Saturn, Dione, where the spacecraft has conducted one of its closest flybys to date.

The probe had an unprecedented view of the Dione’s cratered surface, when it was at a distance of only 321 miles which is one of the closest approaches. This is the fourth flyby by the spacecraft, and this is not the closest. The third flyby in December 2011 was the closest flyby, where the probe descended onto the moon’s terrain at a mere 62 miles.

The image sent by the probe was taken by the narrow angle camera of Cassini, and it was captured when the probe was at a distance of 48,000 miles from the moon where Saturn’s majestic rings can be observed from the distance.

This image was taken during Cassini’s penultimate flyby and is also part of the last series of the scientific phase of the mission before it begins its final stage.

Mission controllers are preparing for the spacecraft to swoop down on Saturn’s ring plane where it will be placed into its polar orbit. The team will then send commands to the spacecraft where it will start to explore the rings of the giant gas planet, and offering closest view ever of the Saturn’s ring and its mysterious environment.

After visiting the Dione, Cassini will then embark on its next mission where the spacecraft will conduct a remarkable close flyby of a mere 30 miles on the surface of the Saturn’s other moon, the mysterious and icy Enceladus.

It is believed that vast liquid ocean is hiding underneath Enceladus’ icy crust from the evidence of polar geysers that are spewing salt water vapor into space. When the Cassini spacecraft meets Enceladus, mission controllers hope to get the data from the composition of this salty water vapor in order to explore if the moon is suitable for life.

Filed Under: Discovery Tagged With: cassini spacecraft, Dione, Enceladus, saturn, Saturns moon

Cassini spacecraft sends new images of Saturn’s moon Rhea

April 1, 2015 By Stephen Kenwright

rheaSaturn has a total of 62 moons, Rhea is the second largest moon of the Saturn and it is the ninth largest moon in the Solar System.

It is one of the heavily cratered and oldest satellites of the Solar System.

Giovanni Cassini discovered the moon on December 23, 1672.

To complete one spin on its own axis and to rotate around Saturn it takes 4.518 of Earth days.

The brightness of the moon varies based on the position relative to Saturn.

February 9, 2015 the two views of the icy moon are taken when Cassini was 57,000 and 78,000 away from Rhea.

The images captured using the green, clear, IR and UV filters were combined to create these views.

They offered the expanded range of colors visible to human eyes.

Both the views of the moon are orthographic projections facing towards the terrain.

Orthographic view is similar to the view seen by distant observer through a telescope.

Cassini is in Saturn’s equatorial plane form March 2015.

The spacecrafts orbit will remain near the equatorial plane of Saturn for the remainder of 2015.

During this year it will have four close observations of Titan , two of Dione and thee of Enceladus

Filed Under: Discovery Tagged With: Rhea, Saturns moon

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