Category Archives: enceladus

Ski Enceladus

Check out the Moguls!

Back in my grad school days my officemates and I decided to take up skiing as a respite from the heavy workload and stress of first-year studies. We formed what became known as the “Klingon Ski Team” and our charge was to “ski with honor!”  The University of Colorado was within an hour or two’s drive of several decent ski areas, and so we skiied with honor as best we could, hardly missing a weekend except during the December holidays, when the slopes were packed with tourists.

Cairo Sulcus on Enceladus, taken by Cassinis narrow-angle camera.
Cairo Sulcus on Enceladus, taken by Cassini's narrow-angle camera. Image size is 1024 x 1024; scale is 10 meters per pixel.

I was reminded of those heady days of Klingon sitzmarks and fearless mogul-jumping when I saw this image of the surface of Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus in the Boston Globe’s “Big Picture” section yesterday.

These ridges and folds are actually wrinkles in the icy crust and some of those chunks of ice are a couple of hundred meters across.  This place would provide some incredible ski runs, if you could figure out a way to get there and get the appropriate ski gear (including oxygen tanks and life-support suits) and find a chopper to drop you for some extreme outer solar system skiing.  Klingons would do it!

Going South for the Summer

Cassini at Enceladus: More!  More!

These are the infamous tiger stripes in the region on Enceladus where Cassini scientists spotted material coming out of vents.  It’s a false-color mosaic–meaning that several sets of images from the Imaging Subsystem were pieced together and colored to highlight specific units of the surface that scientists want to study. Here’s what the Cassini mission press release has to say about this image:

Areas that are greenish in appearance are believed to represent deposits of coarser grained ice and solid boulders that are too small to be seen at this scale, but which are visible in the higher resolution views, while whitish deposits represent finer grained ice. The mosaic shows that coarse-grained and solid ice are concentrated along valley floors and walls, as well as along the upraised flanks of the “tiger stripe” fractures, which may be covered with plume fallout that landed not far from the sources. Elsewhere on Enceladus, this coarse water ice is concentrated within outcrops along cliff faces and at the top of ridges. The sinuous boundary of scarps and ridges that encircles the south polar terrain at about 55 degrees south latitude is conspicuous. Much of the coarse-grained or solid ice along this boundary may be blocky rubble that has crumbled off of cliff faces as a result of ongoing seismic activity.

Wouldn’t it be fun to hike this area? Perhaps in the future, planetary geologists will bring their equipment here to sample the surface, measure its properties, and give all of us here on Earth the ultimate close-up pictures of this fascinating moon.

Just to give you an idea what Voyager 2 saw, here’s the image we all marvelled over 27 years ago this month. Even then, we were all fascinated with the juxtaposed terrains and mysterious cracks on this icy surface.  What a difference nearly three decades makes!

I’ve written before about the scene at Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena that night, when Enceladus showed us her stuff. It was a noisy, wonderful experience, made even  more exciting by the fact that when this picture came down from the Deep Space Network and scanned across the screen, it was during a live broadcast of Nightline. A lot of science writers and planetary scientists were standing around watching, and thus we were all together in one big happy family jabbering to each other about what we were seeing on the screens. We made so much noise when we saw the pics that the floor directors for Nightline had to shush us several times, pretty much to no avail!  Hey… we were watching planetary science history unfold before our eyes.  With all due respect to Ted Koppel, Enceladus was far more fetching and mysterious, and we weren’t going to let the chance go by to do instant science interpretation on that amazing image!