Quarks to Quasars

Strange Days on Saturn’s Moons
Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Thomas Romer/Gordan Ugarkovic
“Frozen” does not mean “static,” at least not among the icy moons orbiting Saturn. A remarkable 2010 image from NASA’s Cassini probe—now in its seventh year orbiting the ringed planet—shows just how dynamic these frigid worlds really are.
Thomas Romer and Gordan Ugarkovic, graphic designers who specialize in astronomical images, produced this portrait by merging two Cassini shots taken minutes apart as the probe whizzed past Enceladus on May 18.  Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, dominates the view. Its thick, opaque  orange atmosphere rains liquid methane, which flows into lakes on the  surface. The foreground action here comes from another Saturnian moon,  310-mile-wide Enceladus, which emits huge jets of icy particles,  here dramatically backlit by the sun. The material in these plumes may  originate in an underground ocean before being forced to the –300 degree  
Fahrenheit surface and spewed out through cracks at the moon’s south  pole. That spooky line cutting across the scene is an edge-on view of  Saturn’s rings.

Strange Days on Saturn’s Moons

Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Thomas Romer/Gordan Ugarkovic

“Frozen” does not mean “static,” at least not among the icy moons orbiting Saturn. A remarkable 2010 image from NASA’s Cassini probe—now in its seventh year orbiting the ringed planet—shows just how dynamic these frigid worlds really are.

Thomas Romer and Gordan Ugarkovic, graphic designers who specialize in astronomical images, produced this portrait by merging two Cassini shots taken minutes apart as the probe whizzed past Enceladus on May 18. Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, dominates the view. Its thick, opaque orange atmosphere rains liquid methane, which flows into lakes on the surface. The foreground action here comes from another Saturnian moon, 310-mile-wide Enceladus, which emits huge jets of icy particles, here dramatically backlit by the sun. The material in these plumes may originate in an underground ocean before being forced to the –300 degree 
Fahrenheit surface and spewed out through cracks at the moon’s south pole. That spooky line cutting across the scene is an edge-on view of Saturn’s rings.

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Posted on Sunday, 19 February
Tagged as: Science   Saturn   Astronomy   Saturn’s Moons  
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