Category Archives: cassini

Smile for Cassini, Wave at Saturn

Get Ready for a LARGE Group Picture!

How we should look to Cassini on July 18. Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech.

On July 19 from 21:27 to 21:42 UTC, 5:27 to 5:42 EDT, 2:27 to 2:42 PDT—a period of about 15 minutes) the Cassini spacecraft circling Saturn is going to take an image of Saturn with Earth in the scene.  That means we’ll ALL be in the picture, as seen from a distance of 1.44 billion kilometers!  So, wherever you are, take a few minutes to get outside and wave in the direction of Saturn. Yes, it will be during the day for some of us, but you can still find out about where to look in the sky from this useful blog entry by Jane Houston Jones.

The Cassini Solstice mission’s main goal for this image is to study the very diffuse rings of ice and dust particles that surround Saturn. The best way to do this is to look at stars as their light twinkles through the rings. The mission team members will analyze visual and infrared light data collected by the spacecraft’s instruments and cameras. The spacecraft is at just the right distance and viewing angle to make a high-resolution mosaic of the planet and rings, and in that mosaic, Earth will appear as a small blue dot in the distance.

There’s been only one other chance to image Earth from the outer solar system in such a way. In fact, there have been only two images of Earth from the outer solar system. The first and most distant was one was taken 23 years ago by NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft from a distance of 6 billion kilometers. That image became known as the “Pale Blue Dot” view, memorialized by Carl Sagan in his book of the same name.  Cassini took the other image in 2006. So, if you’re out and about on July 19th, take a few moments to wave at Saturn and be part of the largest group picture of recent times. And, no photobombing!

Saturn Dazzles Again!

Even Shadowed, It’s Gorgeous

Check this image out, folks. Click on it to get the big view.  It’s a backlit, seriously moody view of the ringed planet made by the Cassini spacecraft and released this week by NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the Space Science Institute. It’s a rare sight because it’s not often that the spacecraft’s orbit takes it to the precise point where the planet, rings, and Sun all line up perfectly to deliver a high-quality view of the rings, plus two dots in the lower left that are Enceladus (Saturn’s active moon) and Tethys (another of Saturn’s icy moons). The detail in this image is astonishing. You can see individual rings in the system, and if you peek closely, you can see them in the gaps as well.  The shadow of the rings on the planet’s cloud tops is especially amazing.

Saturn was one of the first planets I saw a picture of when I was growing up. We had a book about space in the house and when I laid eyes on that weird ringy place, I was hooked!  A bunch of years later, I found myself at JPL during the Voyager 2 encounter with Saturn, covering the event for a newspaper story.  It was even more amazing to me than that first glimpse I had as a child. Pictures like this continually reinforce for ME that the universe is an amazing place that we need to keep exploring!

Holiday Greetings

One of many cool holiday cards using Hubble images! Courtesy STScI.

For those of you still looking for great images to put on your holiday newsletters or greeting cards, this Saturn image is a pretty good candidate. There’s also the highly popular Hubble Holiday Greeting Card page. It’s chock full of 38 nicely designed cards using Hubble Space Telescope images you can simply download and use for your greetings.  I have a hard time deciding which ones to use, so for some years I’ve used every one of them.

I’ve seen people also make up their own cards using images from Spitzer Space Telescope, Chandra X-ray Observatory, and the Mars Curiosity rover, and many others. There’s some gorgeous artwork out there, provided by the cosmos and your tax dollars! So, check it out and be creative!