Cassini Returns Amazing New Imagery from Saturn 118
SeaDour writes "The Cassini spacecraft has recently entered a highly-inclined orbit around Saturn, revealing some never-before-seen images of the planet's ring system as seen from above and below the planet. 'Sailing high above Saturn and seeing the rings spread out beneath us like a giant, copper medallion is like exploring an alien world we've never seen before. It just doesn't look like the same place. It's so utterly breath-taking, it almost gives you vertigo.' The spacecraft will eventually return to its standard orbit parallel to the ring plane in late June."
Vertigo? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Vertigo? (Score:5, Informative)
Let's start looking at economically (Score:3, Interesting)
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Methane - Space Colony?(People in enclosed spaces) Get it????
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On earth, yes, methane gas can be burned to produce energy. However, this is because earth has an oxygen-rich atmosphere. Out in space, there is no extra oxygen floating around, so burning methane would probably do nothing (disclaimer: IANAC (chemist)).
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It's too bad that idea is completely infeasible. The problem is it's nuclear, and that's against the treaties about nuclear weapons in space. Yes, propulsion != weapons, but try convincing politicians of that.
We humans are doomed to our own stupidity.
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yeah, let's (Score:2)
Yes, if we have about another century of experience with robotic spacecraft. Of course, we won't get that if we burn most of our space budget on joy rides to the moon and Mars, both of which will likely get canceled before they ever get off the ground.
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the solar system is an organism, too.
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A billion tons of methane isn't that useful without 6 billion tons of oxygen to burn it.
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Re:Forget Saturn (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Forget Saturn (Score:5, Funny)
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Parallel? Coplanar. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Parallel? Coplanar. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Images hosted by NASA (Score:5, Informative)
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Then of course I realized Creative Commons doesn't nest the Cs in their logo.
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Other pics (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/media/2
Re:Other pics (Score:4, Funny)
They can both down a Ciclops.
Thanks, I'll be here all week.
Re:Better photos (Score:5, Funny)
Check out that 4th photo caption. Damn Microsoft and their interplanetary advertising campaign!!!
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You must be new here.
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Am I the only one that thinks thoose photos look fake ?
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Seriously, they look like somthing I could make in photoshop.
Am I looking at the wrong ones or somthing ?
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No colonizing mars (Score:2, Funny)
Its too bad Mars (probably) doesn't have tangible rings. Because as they say, "if you can't support a medallion, you can't support a family". And if you can't support a family, then you must be a liberal arts major and trying to colonize Mars.
Or something
*below* the planet ?!? (Score:2)
And where would that be exactly? Surely, by convention the probe is above the planet - wherever it is in its orbit?
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That's not a moon! That's a... (Score:4, Funny)
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(couldn't resist...)
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The mean temperature on Saturn (at the cloud tops) is 88 K (-185 C; -290 F).
Maybe it is warmer on the surface, but with all the clouds in the way, I don't think the view is great.
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I'll just wear a thick wooley jumpey when I go outside.
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I'll just wear a thick wooley jumpey when I go outside.
They don't call it a gas giant for nothing. The surface is less dense than water. You might be suprised by the distance you would sink into the surface.
Saturn's interior composition is primarily that of simple molecules such as hydrogen and helium, which are liquids under the high pressure environments found in the interiors of the outer planets, and not solids.
Quote blatenly stolen from;
http://www.windows. [ucar.edu]
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So does that mean I would need wellington boots as well?
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If it's anything like California, you'll pay an arm and a leg for the view.
Above vs. below?.. (Score:2)
How do you tell above vs. below in the context?
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Ok, so you've identified the line along which both the "above" and the "below" align. Now, which direction is "up"?
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Thanks to American taxpayers (Score:5, Funny)
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The U.S. contributed $2.6 billion [wikipedia.org] dollars to this mission.
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Only a couple hundred million dollars? (Score:2)
(Incidentally, 3.2 billion is also how much karma I have lost for pasting that link on Cassini stories. Let no one say that I'm unwilling to sacrifice for sc
pay attention! (Score:3, Funny)
Dude! You can't talk about that! (Score:2)
Why not... (Score:2)
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Who cares about the rings! (Score:4, Interesting)
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/imag
NEVER? (Score:2)
Well at least not by the carbon-based sentient life forms on the 3rd planet from the sun in this very same solar system.
The ultimate Saturn movie (Score:2)
The same thing should be done on Mars, with the rovers shooting an entire day of wide angle mosaics to reconstruct
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Re:Walter Reed (Score:5, Informative)
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/overview/index.cfm [nasa.gov]
--ob
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Spare me your anti-American B.S. The U.S. has been a leader in modern technology for a long time. Europe and China provided the foundation for mechanical and chemical engineering. The bulk of modern electrical engineering came from the U.S.
The computer you typed your post on almost certainly used a CPU made by an American company, for example. Intel, AMD, Cyrix/NatSemi... the only major one I'm aware of that is not a U.S. company is VIA (Japanese company). The first microprocessors were invented appr
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The most widely used architecture in the world is...British: ARM. In 2005, 1.7 billion chips were manufactured. And they're everywhere.
Also there's Hitachi/Renesas...
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I'm well aware of ARM, but it's not a computer CPU. It's an embedded CPU. I'm not aware of ARM in use in any traditional computers at this time, though it might have been in the distant past. Also, ARM is a family of chips, and while ARM holdings is a British company, AFAIK, they mostly license the tech to other manufacturers like Marvell (Intel's spun-off XScale arm) and Texas Instruments to manufacture it.
Also, while the original ARM architecture was designed by Acorn (a British company), that's not
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Try again.
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Anyone ever wondered how nicely cutted news people at US get?
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Wow! The grandparent is a moron, but the parent is also something special. We're hair splitting, but I'll bite. Every government system that is not an outright representative democracy IS a dictatorship. What do monarchies, dictatorships, theocracies, oligarchies, etc. all have in common? The common citizen has no legal recourse for changing
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