SETI bioastro: Fw: Cassini Pictures Show Majesty of Saturn's Rings

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Thu Jul 01 2004 - 13:47:32 PDT

  • Next message: LARRY KLAES: "SETI bioastro: Fw: [HASTRO-L] Scientific American issues 1953-1974"

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory<mailto:info_at_jpl.nasa.gov>
    To: ljk4_at_msn.com<mailto:ljk4_at_msn.com>
    Sent: Thursday, July 01, 2004 4:15 PM
    Subject: Cassini Pictures Show Majesty of Saturn's Rings

    Carolina Martinez (818) 354-9382
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

    Donald Savage (202) 358-1727
    NASA Headquarters, Washington

    News Release: 2004-169 July 1, 2004

    Fresh Cassini Pictures Show Majesty of Saturn's Rings

    The first pictures taken by the Cassini spacecraft after it began
    orbiting Saturn show breathtaking detail of Saturn's rings, and
    other science measurements reveal that Saturn's magnetic field
    pulsed in size as Cassini approached the planet.

    "For years, we've dreamed about getting pictures like this. After
    all the planning, waiting and worrying, just seeing these first
    images makes it all worthwhile," said Dr. Charles Elachi, Cassini
    radar team leader and director of NASA's Jet Propulsion
    Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "We're eager to share these new
    views and the exciting discoveries ahead with people around the
    world."

    The narrow angle camera on Cassini took 61 images soon after the
    main engine burn that put Cassini into orbit on Wednesday night.
    The spacecraft was hurtling at 15 kilometers per second (about
    34,000 miles per hour), so only pieces of the rings were
    targeted.

    "We won't see the whole puzzle, only pieces, but what we are
    seeing is dramatic," said Dr. Carolyn Porco, Cassini imaging team
    leader, Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colo. "The images are
    mind-boggling, just mind-boggling. I've been working on this
    mission for 14 years and I shouldn't be surprised, but it is
    remarkable how startling it is to see these images for the first
    time."

    Some images show patterned density waves in the rings, resembling
    stripes of varying width. Another shows a ring's scalloped edge.
    "We do not see individual particles but a collection of
    particles, like a traffic jam on a highway," Porco said. "We see
    a bunch of particles together, then it clears up, then there's
    traffic again."

    Other instruments on Cassini besides the camera have also been
    busy collecting data. The magnetospheric imaging instrument took
    the first image of Saturn's magnetosphere. "With Voyager we
    inferred what it looked like, in the same way that a blind man
    feels an elephant. Now we can see the elephant," said Dr. Tom
    Krimigis of Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel,
    Md., principal investigator for the magnetospheric imaging
    instrument. The magnetosphere is a bubble of energetic particles
    around the planet shaped by Saturn's magnetic field and
    surrounded by the solar wind of particles speeding outward from
    the Sun.

    "During approach to Saturn, Cassini was greeted at the gate,"
    said Dr. Bill Kurth, deputy principal investigator for the radio
    and plasma wave science instrument onboard Cassini. "The bow
    shock where the solar wind piles into the planet's magnetosphere
    was encountered earlier than expected. It was as if Saturn's
    county line had been redrawn, and that was a surprise." Cassini
    first crossed the bow shock about 3 million kilometers (1.9
    million miles) from Saturn, which is about 50 percent farther
    from the planet than had been detected by the Pioneer, Voyager 1
    and Voyager 2 spacecraft that flew past Saturn in 1979, 1980 and
    1981.

    The location of the bow shock varies with how hard the solar wind
    is blowing, Kurth said. As the magnetosphere repeatedly expanded
    and contracted while Cassini was approaching Saturn, the
    spacecraft crossed the bow shock seven times.

    The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the
    European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet
    Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of
    Technology in Pasadena, manages the Cassini-Huygens mission for
    NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. JPL designed,
    developed and assembled the Cassini orbiter.
    For the latest images and more information about the Cassini-
    Huygens mission, visit http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov> and

    http://www.nasa.gov/cassini> .

                                  -end-


  • Next message: LARRY KLAES: "SETI bioastro: Fw: [HASTRO-L] Scientific American issues 1953-1974"

    This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.6 : Thu Jul 01 2004 - 13:54:57 PDT