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By Emily Lakdawalla




Weekend treats from Cassini: Enceladus plumes plus bonus Tethys and Dione

Aug. 14, 2010 | 16:52 PDT | 23:52 UTC
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Over the last couple of days Cassini flew past Enceladus, Tethys and Dione, so there are lots of treats to see on the raw images website! You should go check it out for yourself, but here are a couple of real favorites.

First, of all, this stumper. Can you figure out what's going on?


Credit: NASA / JPL / SSI
Can't figure it out? Maybe this animation will help:
Enceladus rising
Enceladus rising
Cassini looked toward the night sides of Enceladus and Saturn, catching Enceladus crossing the barely lit edge of Saturn's disk, to capture this unusual four-image animation on August 13, 2010. Credit: NASA / JPL / SSI / animation by Emily Lakdawalla
In the top image, we're looking at the south pole of Enceladus, poised above Saturn's northern limb, with both bodies seen nearly from their night sides. Cool.

That's not the only Enceladus awesomeness. There are also 30, count them, 30 frames captured as Cassini was flying toward the moon, pointed at the south pole and the plumes. The south pole is now suffering through its 15-year winter and is in permanent darkness, so the plume vents are too. But the plumes rise above the winter night into daylight, so you can see them clearly as Cassini approaches. Of course I had to assemble these into an animation. Just for fun, here's an interim version of the animation, without any alignment of the frames; the point of view moves around a bit as Cassini works to keep pointed at its commanded spot, then updates to new pointing instructions.
Zoom into Enceladus! (interim product)
Zoom into Enceladus! (interim product)
Credit: NASA / JPL / SSI / animation by Emily Lakdawalla
In this version I tried to make the point of view a little less jittery. It is so cool to feel as though I'm swooping toward those plumes, and to see those south polar fissures rotating as we zoom toward them!
Zoom in to Enceladus
Zoom in to Enceladus
This animation is composed of 30 frames captured as Cassini swooped toward its targeted flyby of Enceladus on August 13, 2010. The images have been inverted so that the south pole appears as the "ground" below Cassini. Its active geysers are erupting into south polar winter darkness, but rise into daylight above Enceladus' surface. Credit: NASA / JPL / SSI / animation by Emily Lakdawalla
It's more stable but not what I'd call a final product. Still, this is as much work as I'd want to do on this image set before the real data gets archived into the Planetary Data System. There's a lot of contrast in this image, from sunlit bright Enceladus ice to shadowed plumes, and the automated process that converts the Cassini images to JPEG format for posting on the raw images website is never very kind to images containing so much contrast.

Aside from Enceladus, there is also great stuff from close in to Tethys and Dione. I particularly liked this well-framed shot of the large Tethys crater Penelope. I've flipped it 180 degrees to put north up, and processed out the every-other-line truncation that causes the Cassini closeup images of icy moons to have sawtoothy edges. Note the lovely landslide fan at about the 10:00 position, and the strange skinny set of troughs that arcs through the crater from about 1:00 to about 5:00.
Penelope crater, Tethys
Penelope crater, Tethys
Cassini flew past Tethys on August 14, 2010 to capture this view of the crater Penelope. Below Penelope, the center crater in a line of three small craters is named Irus. Credit: NASA / JPL / SSI / processed by Emily Lakdawalla
(If you have Photoshop, here's how to solve the every-other-line truncation: use the marquee tool to select the area that's affected by the problem. Then go to Filter > Video > De-Interlace and click OK. If that makes the problem worse, hit Undo then go to Filter > Video > De-Interlace and select "Even Fields" instead of "Odd fields" and click OK.

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Comments

Awesome images Emily
Fabulous work, the animation is great!

The grooves on Tethys are really puzzling, they seem quite sharp (fresh?) and yet I'm sure I can see hints of more faded ones running SSW from 12 o'clock. Could just be a trick of the light though. Could these be the result of tidal forces on the moon ?
#1 - Chris Samuel - 08/14/2010 - 18:04
Super cool images
Super cool images and great work truly amazing what is out there. Thank you
#2 - Craig Clark - 08/14/2010 - 19:05
Great animations
You beat me to the punch again Emily :) was just now going to put those together. Great shots they turned out. The plumes are very defined.
#3 - Errol Coder - 08/14/2010 - 20:55
Good work, and Thanks!!
Really nice animation Emily, and thanks so much for the tip on removing the annoying lines, I have been wondering how to do that for years !! :-D
#4 - Loonyman - 08/15/2010 - 01:47
The
I could look at Enceladus until my eyes grow dim. Just imagine sweeping through one of those plumes...beautiful. Thank you, Ms Lakdawalla
#5 - Phil Bearton - 08/15/2010 - 02:43
Grooves are puzzling
These grooves appear in a lot of satellite shots. (eg Phobos) Are there any theories as to what causes them?

I know they're unlikely to be solar powered but, with the South pole of Encaladus now in winter, I wonder whether any plumes in the Northern hemisphere will start up?
#6 - Tony Fisk - 08/15/2010 - 16:59
Any video maker out want to add _Also Sprach Zarathustra_ to the images. I think it needs to be that particular piece of music. It seems perfect for Cassini images.
#7 - Michael Hopkins - 08/16/2010 - 05:35
Beauiful!
Emily, you are very talented. Nice work....
#8 - Henry Neeser - 08/16/2010 - 09:54
Woah! What's that tiny bright flash below the terminator on Enceladus? You can see it on both versions of the animation. Could it be...?
#9 - Rick Gauger - 08/17/2010 - 09:16
beautiful pictures and beautiful work, iam also curious about the flasching lights on both animations
#10 - eugene figueroa - 12/26/2010 - 16:47
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