Cassini's Got Pictures And Data 109
MythMoth writes "To celebrate the anniversary of the Cassini-Huygens probe's orbital insertion, NASA's JPL has a set of fifteen amazing photos from the past year. Meanwhile, the BBC reports that some of the latest science data from the mission reveals that Saturn's ring system has its own (thin) O2 atmosphere, and that the planet's rotation seems to be slowing!"
Re:O2 Atmosphere + Water (Score:2)
Re:O2 Atmosphere + Water (Score:5, Insightful)
The people you're talking about are hardworking and dedicated people at the forefront of exploration. If the sequence of their efforts at exploration isn't logical to you, consider the possibility that you lack key information fueling your basic assumptions, and frame your question with that in mind.
Otherwise, it's more difficult for the people who know the answers to cull the question from the troll.
Re:O2 Atmosphere + Water (Score:3, Funny)
I also find it amazing that no matter where we travel nowadays we always find the need to take photographs and there is always one picture [nasa.gov] with a fingerprint blocking the view.
Re:O2 Atmosphere + Water (Score:2)
Kinda has the whole Death Star look to it...
Re:O2 Atmosphere + Water (Score:1)
Well, most of these so-called 'scientists' are aware that Mars has a surface and Saturn does not. Most of the ways we imagine life starting involves goopy watery pools. Saturn is a gas giant. Pools don't form on planets without surfaces.
Can you at least check Wikipedia before you started breaking out the pejorative references to people whose work you plainly do not understand?
Re:O2 Atmosphere + Water (Score:2)
I had a rather wistful hope that the Huygens probe would either get stuck in a tree on the way down, or eaten by something... ah well, wishful thinking dashed, but I do think the pictures (and more importantly the science) are just stunning.
He said "insertion" ... (Score:5, Funny)
Hell, this is /., we'll celebrate anyone's insertion. Call me for the explosion.
Death Star! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Death Star! (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Death Star! (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Death Star! (Score:1)
Mimas (Score:2)
Re:Death Star! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Death Star! (Score:2)
Ah, Alderaan, we miss thee, tho we never knew thee
SB
Re:Death Star! (Score:1)
My stars! It's full of god!
Re:Death Star! (Score:2)
Dude, the election was last November.
Don't worry, though. The Death Star won.
Titan's True Color OR Is That Mars...? (Score:3, Interesting)
Inquiring minds want to know.
Re:Titan's True Color OR Is That Mars...? (Score:2)
Re:Titan's True Color OR Is That Mars...? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Titan's True Color OR Is That Mars...? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Titan's True Color OR Is That Mars...? (Score:2)
That's what they did, but color doesn't work like that. What they are showing you is what you would get with a camera with a bad white-balance setting.
Chances are that if you actually looked at the scene, you'd see something fairly neutral, closer to the b/w image, or even with blue and green hues.
Re:Titan's True Color OR Is That Mars...? (Score:2)
and they did it without a shuttle! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:and they did it without a shuttle! (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:and they did it without a shuttle! (Score:1)
Re:and they did it without a shuttle! (Score:1)
Can't wait for the video. (Score:4, Interesting)
Imagine something like the the descent panorama [nasa.gov] but in the IMAX and later on your big fat TV.
Re:Can't wait for the video. (Score:1)
Re:Can't wait for the video. (Score:5, Informative)
The camera. This dude has to work in a radiation environment. You cannot just take your high-def Newegg purchased camera and launch it. These types of things have been tried before (non-flight qualified parts) and they don't last long. No, you have to build this bad boy from scratch with parts (CCDs, etc) that can withstand a severe radiation environment.
BitRate. One of the significant cost issues on any mission is the science bitrate requirements. It costs a lot of money to get data back to Earth. First there is the instruments ability to collect such data (insignificant)... Second there is the spacecrafts ability to transmit this data, a very significant problem.. (with increased bitRate comes increased power requirements, increased mass, etc...) and with that comes a significant increase in the launch costs, to say nothing of the development costs.
Collection... With an increased bitRate comes a greater requirement to collect the data and so a significant increase in cost.. You don't just point your little home dish at the right location and get a signal... (don't get me wrong, that would be great, but the power to generate such a signal would be sadly cost prohibitative). No, you have to collect the data on the big boys and they are not cheap.
In each and every one of these missions the scientists and engineers have to scale back their desires (not because of any technological problems but) because what they would like to do cannot be done given the funding opportunity. So you cut, scale back, cut some more, scale back again, etc... and eventually you arrive at a proposal that might actually be funded. It's not exactly what you would hope for, but given the opportunity available it's your best bet at a viable mission.
Re:Can't wait for the video. (Score:3, Insightful)
Big camera? No worry. Need huge solar panels? No worry. Send them up piecemeal and build in orbit. Bus sized probes shouldn't be a problem.
Great stuff (Score:5, Interesting)
Was anyone else struck by how Titan seems very similar to Mars on its surface shot? Lots of small rocks and boulders laying around its surface and a general haze present etc etc.
Kowabunga! (Score:1)
Re:Great stuff (Score:2)
Re:Great stuff (Score:2, Informative)
Actually, those "rocks" may be ice chunks according to some experts.
Why Just Pictures? (Score:3, Interesting)
Certifications: Worth It Or Waste Of Time? [whattofix.com]
Re:Why Just Pictures? (Score:5, Insightful)
Best of all, if you really want to know what the planets look like, these "false colored" images are the best thing after all because they pick out features that single sources of original data are obscuring or not picking up at all. It shouldn't be forgotten that this is data imaging, not a family picnic slideshow; the instruments being used to generate the data are not limited to the familiar visible-spectrum light camera that we are used to for our snapshots.
Still, I'm anxiously awaiting those holographic images you suggested. Now thats a nice enhancement!
Re:Why Just Pictures? (Score:1)
"If these robot missions are to take the place of manned exploration as some have indicated, ETC..."
Holly shit. Nearly all of the scientific advances have taken place on these robotic missions. Your FUD would like everyone to think that manned missions somehow trump robotic missions on the science-production front. Go ahead and do the study (don't waste your time, it has already been done) and you will find that any 1 of these robotic missio
Congratulations to all involved (Score:3, Insightful)
For the future, I'd like to see us mass-producing multi-use probes and sending small convoys of them out across the system. I'd also like to see more space telescopes sent out and about to capture data to send home. Imagine sending something about half the size of Hubble to orbit between Mars and Jupiter.
Re:Congratulations to all involved (Score:2)
Re:Congratulations to all involved (Score:1)
-kaplanfx
Seeing as it's a vote... (Score:2)
Still, well done to all concerned for giving us a years worth of desktop pictures. Oh, and some science.
Re:Seeing as it's a vote... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Seeing as it's a vote... (Score:1)
rotation (Score:5, Funny)
Of course it is. We keep using it to boost our spacecraft.
Re:rotation (Score:2)
If it is indeed true that Saturn's rotation is slowing, then something very strange is happening with that planet.
The only thing a not especially well-educated person like me can make of this observation is that there is mass migrating upward from Saturn's core, thereby slowing the rotation down. Then again, there are the physicists who posit the existence of strange "hyperdimensional" effects to a
Re:rotation (Score:2)
Ever wonder why only one side of the moon faces us? It's called tidal locking.
The Earth is slowing down too. Tidal forces gives the moon our angular momentum little by little. The Sun affects us too, just less so. As the earth's rotatiion slows, the moon's orbital velocity increases pushing the moon farther away.
Saturn's rotation is slowing? As someone who has studied astrophysics, I can saf
Re:rotation (Score:2)
Re:rotation (Score:2)
First the earth would slow to match the moon's orbit. The moon's gravity affects us more than the sun's (roughly 3 times more if I remember correctly). Then the sun's tidal forces would eventually slow the Earth-Moon system so that the moon spirals back into the Earth.
But here is the rub. The earth would lock with the sun perfectly... if there were no other celestial bodies affecting the two. However the other planets, mostly Venus, would probably throw a mon
Re:rotation (Score:2)
rotation problem (Score:4, Insightful)
My first thought there (+grain_salt) is that Saturn must have suffered a grazing collision with a large body - probably the same one that created the rings - and the dispersion of the rings mass, like the recession of Earth's moon, is having the same effect on Saturn that it does here, slowing rotation. Unlike Earth's moon this would have to be an unstable system.
Only that seems like a *huge* number, given how fast Saturns' rotation is, and how massive it is *. So the impact must be recent - and it's pretty widely accepted, I gather, that Saturn's rings are very young.
If that figure for the rotational change is right - is it just the surface winds or something deeper? - then whatever created the rings was *very very* recent?
* Too tired to do the math, but wouldn't Saturn's low density contribute?
Cheers,
SB
Re:rotation problem (Score:2)
Re:rotation problem (Score:2)
As "young" as the rings are, they're still quite old compared to mankind
SB
Re:rotation problem (Score:1)
An impact a million years ago would have slowed down Saturn's rotation a million years ago.
For every change in speed or angular momentum there is an applied force somewhere. An impact that happened that long ago can't be directly responsible for something happening today.
Re:rotation problem (Score:2)
The dancer continues to slowly spread her arms, and Saturn's inertial moment changes as the ring system changes. Do I have to spell it out?
SB
Re:rotation problem (Score:2, Insightful)
Even Earth's outer rotation speed is slightly different from the core's because the core is molten and can move slightly independant of the harde
Coming Soon! (Score:3, Funny)
T E X A S
!!!!!
Yeah, baby, yeaaaah!
Re:Coming Soon! (Score:1)
thin atmosphere (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, yeah -1 Pedant...
Re:thin atmosphere (Score:1)
Actually, yes! Pretty phenomena, but they aren't as rare as the illusive atmododecahedron. Those angled gasses are usually only found in geometry class...
Titan volcano image is cool too (Score:3, Interesting)
The Titan landscape has proven to be so fantastic I hope NASA considers sending a long lived rover back soon. I think the recent Titan volcano [nasa.gov]VIMS image belongs on this list.
Re:Titan volcano image is cool too (Score:3, Informative)
The Solar System Exploration Strategic Roadmap [spaceref.com] lays out NASA's current plans/wishlist for robotic exploration in the next 20+ years. Basically, they foresee one Discovery [nasa.gov] class (NEAR, Mars Pathfinder, Deep Impact, etc) mission every two years or so; two or three more expensive New Frontiers missions per decade such as the Pluto New Horizons probe or the newly announced Juno [spacetoday.net] Jupiter Polar Obiter; and one or possibly two $1 billion+ "Flagship" missions. The first flagship mission will be the much delayed Euro
Re:Titan volcano image is cool too (Score:2)
Cheap planet (Score:5, Interesting)
They did say that they might not be measuring it right. Still, between the swirly fluid mass of the planet, the moon system, magnetic field and whatnot, if they're correct, it would be interesting to see where Saturn's hiding all the angular momentum.
Re:Cheap planet (Score:2)
BTW: Is there any estimate of the mass of the rings and moons compared to the mass of the earth's moon?
Shades of Niven (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Shades of Niven (Score:2)
The math was pretty tough though.
Best picture not in list, unfortunately (Score:4, Interesting)
But, my favorite Cassini picture is this one, [nasa.gov] of the rings edge on. Here you can see a perfectly straight line, almost a quarter of a million miles long. Where else in the universe can you see such a thing?
Thad Beier
Mod parent up (Score:2)
How.... "herded"
One would think that random impacts and gravitational interactions among the particles in the ring would make them much "fuzzier". Yet the ring is remarkably compact. It's not even on Saturn's equator, it's tilted.
Makes my head hurt
Cheers,
SB
Gorgeous. (Score:2)
Re:Gorgeous. (Score:2)
Yes, the planet is really that damn huge...
Re:Gorgeous. (Score:2)
would've assumed the moons would be out of the plane of the rings somehow. also forgot how big earths moon is compared to its primary.
man, i suddenly feel bad for all those astronomers who have to find and count the damn things.
Just out of curiosity (Score:2)
I wonder where the ring line points to, when viewed from the side? I.e. which stars lie along the line (if the line were to be continued as it is)?
Entertain me, astronomy people :)
Nice shots (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
stupid ST reference (Score:1)
For whatever reason (sleep deprivation??) I read that and heard Spock in my head saying "the Defiant is slowing"
God, I need to get out more.
Androk
Re:Apple Advice needed - OT (Score:1)