A parade of Five Saturnian Moons
25 January 2012


Fig. 1
Five Saturnian Moons
The image, acquired by the Saturn-bound Cassini spacecraft, shows an alignment of five moons of Saturn. The view is dominated by icy Rhea, Saturn’s second largest moon. Saturn’s graceful rings are visible nearly edge-on, below Rhea. Prometheus, a small irregularly-shaped moon, is visible as a little clump of material in the rings, below Rhea.
Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute


NASA recently published a wonderful view of five Saturnian moons, acquired by the Saturn-orbiting Cassini spacecraft. Rhea (1,528 km across), Saturn’s second largest moon, dominates the picture, while Saturn’s magnificent rings are visible nearly edge-on, below Rhea. (The names of most planetary moons come from mythologies.)

Rhea was closest to Cassini, at the time the image was taken. Dione (1,123 km across) appears just above the rings, near the center of the image. Tiny Prometheus (86 km across) is just barely visible as a small clump in the rings, to the right of Dione. Epimetheus (113 km across), another small moon, can be seen as a small speck of light, to the right of the rings, while Tethys (1,062 km across) is on far right of the image.

The image was taken in visible light with the Cassini spacecraft wide-angle camera, on 11 January 2011. Cassini was at a distance of approximately 61,000 km from Rhea. Cassini was looking on the sunlit side of the rings, from just above the plane of the ring.

Saturn has a large family of satellites, including 62 moons and numerous smaller objects, known as moonlets. Saturn’s moons range widely in size, from Titan (5,150 km across), to tiny, irregularly-shaped moons, measuring a few kilometers wide. Seven of Saturn’s moons are large, but are all, except for Titan, smaller than Earth’s Moon (3,476 km across).

References

NASA’s Cassini Website
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/main/index.html
Wikipedia


Aymen Mohamed Ibrahem
Senior Astronomy Specialist
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