Category Archives: cassini mission

The Whole Enceladus

Tipsy Moon. (Courtesy Cassini-Huygens Web site)
Tipsy Moon. (Courtesy Cassini-Huygens Web site)

Well this is cool. It appears that Saturn’s moon Enceladus has tipped over on its side sometime in the recent past. It didn’t happen last week, but sometime after the moon formed and was reasonably stable, something happened to cause it to roll over. It probably wasn’t collision with something else, but more likely was due to the motion of material inside this moon. That would have rearranged the mass distribution (that is, where the mass is located) inside, and caused it to tip over. The result is that a warm, low-density blob of material is now currently at Enceladus’s south pole. Now, you’d expect the south pole to be the coldest place on Enceladus, but it’s not, and this temperature anomaly in Cassini’s data is what clued scientists into the unusual explanation.

Enceladus has always been considered something of an unusual place in the Saturnian system (which has its share of odd moons, including Titan). It is continually heated due to the gravitationally caused tidal stretching and squeezing as it orbits Saturn. The heat has to escape from the core somehow, and as it does it expands and rises toward the surface. This causes the surface to expand, and since the surface is icy cold, it cracks under the stress from the upwelling material. It’s a continual squeeze play that changes the surface all the time.

I remember the first time I saw Enceladus in a picture sent back by the Voyager 2 spacecraft. It was astonishing to see an icy world with such evidence of activity underneath. Only at the time, nobody was sure what we’d see. Now that Cassini is giving us more views over a long time period, it’s clear that this moon is far from a frozen, dead world. In the words of many a bad science fiction character, geologically speaking, “It’s alive!!!”

The Sights and Sounds of Titan!

Courtesy the Cassini-Huygens Mission Mission to Saturn and Titan
Courtesy the Cassini-Huygens Mission to Saturn and Titan

Yesterday I returned home from the AAS meeting. It was a long flight day, and I logged some airport time waiting for flights. So I decided to try out the ever-present T-Mobile wireless hotspots to see if I could check on the progress of the Huygens data from Titan and the Cassini-Huygens mission via their websites. I’m sure everybody’s seen the images by now. We’re in a great age of planetary exploration when we can tune in to the latest pics from Mars and Saturn every day, if we so wish it! I can pretty well guess how excited the scientists were to find out that their probe had settled down to the surface of Titan and had returned a treasure trove of 90 minutes worth of data before falling silent.

And what a collection! I’d always pictured Titan as this place with hydrocarbon-sludge oceans and maybe a frozen surface. So, the pictures were not a total surprise in that regard. But it was still exciting to see actual rocks and a surface. A friend of mine called this morning and said that it reminded him of Venus, only many hundreds of degrees colder!

If you browse around the Cassini-Huygens web site, you’ll find more pictures, plus a neat page of “sounds” from Titan. It will be interesting to see what else they post in the next few days that will shed more insight into a world that once was hidden and veiled—and still holds surprises for us all.