A New View of a Volcanic Moon
13 July 2007
 

 

Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

NASA recently published an interesting image of Saturn's icy, geologically active moon Enceladus. The image was acquired by the Saturn-bound Cassini spacecraft.

Enceladus appears almost featureless in this far-off view, with dark markings near the moon's south pole. These markings, known as sulci, are long fractures from which a spray of icy particles erupts into space. This spray is believed to be the source of the E ring, Saturn's outermost, diffuse ring.

Like our Moon (3,476 km across), Enceladus (505 km across) keeps the same face turned to its parent planet. Cassini was looking toward Enceladus' Saturn-facing side.

The image was taken with Cassini's narrow-angle camera on 27 May 2007, applying an infrared filter. The spacecraft was approximately 615,000 km from Enceladus. Image scale is 4 km per pixel.

Further Reading

Cassini-Huygens Mission

http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/

Aymen Mohamed Ibrahem

 
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