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Titan's seas got names: They are now on known as Kraken Mare and Ligeia Mare. The large island in Kraken Mare is Mayda Insula.
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Science is a way of trying not to fool yourself. The first principle is that you must not fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool. -- Richard Feynman |
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The impossible often has a kind of integrity which the merely improbable lacks. |
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Mapping Icy Moons
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Everything I need to know I learned through Googling. |
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![]() See the bands? Kinda like the familiar gas and ice giants? This is... Titan. Planetary Photojournal: Banded Moon Quote:
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Does anybody really understand why some planets exhibit atmospheric Super-rotation? It somehow seems counter intuitive, unless the larger host’s (Sun for Venus, Saturn for Titan) tidal rotation transfer is somehow creating this effect. Impressive that Titan's atmosphere does this too.
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Email from Carolyn Porco:
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Everything I need to know I learned through Googling. |
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Planetary Society News: Cassini to Shoot Past Enceladus for Its Fifth Close Encounter
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Sunday August 10 2340 PDT Monday August 11 0240 EDT Monday August 11 0640 UTC Closest Approach Monday August 11 1406 PDT Monday August 11 1706 EDT Monday August 11 2106 UTC Timeline, times UTC Quote:
16 hours to closest approach
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NASA Cassini Blog (August 8, Carolyn Porco):
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NASA Cassini Mission News: Cassini Prepares to Swoop by Saturn's Geyser-Spewing Moon Quote:
Monday August 11 1406 PDT Monday August 11 1706 EDT Monday August 11 2106 UTC 3 hours to closest approach
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NASA Cassini Blog: Cassini Calls Home! (Todd Barber, Cassini Lead Propulsion Engineer)
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Emily Lakdawalla is building Cassini ISS images of Enceladus from the Rev 80 (August 11, 2008) Targeted Flyby that associates raw images with planned image sequences mapped onto a whole Enceladus. When the images are filled in, you'll be able to quickly tell the context of what you're looking at. Just a few have been downloaded as of this posting.
Cassini current raw images is beginning get some images from the flyby, like this: (The line truncation, missing ends of alternate lines on the right of images, is normal and a way of getting something that is better than nothing. Raw Image FAQ) Oh, here's a goood one: ![]() Too bad it's an artist's impression.
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So, what's the lump, the polyp, on Enceladus, in this raw image ID 165909, middle left side:
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Emily Lakdawalla's cleaned up, rotated version From the size of its shadow it's by far the tallest thing in the neighborhood. Oh, the Planetary Society Weblog: More Enceladus image fun, asks, too: Quote:
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I think its an empty coke bottle, buried in the sand, probably by one of those aliens with the beach buggies, that left all those tire marks behind.
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At night the stars put on a show for free (Carole King) |
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As I understand it, that interlacing effect is Cassini's way of doing data compression and maintaining high-frequency information. Each image is preallocated a certain amount of space, so they can plan long data sequences and not completely lose data. So if there is more detail than expected in some sense, it makes up for that by leaving out part of every other line. There are various ways to improve the appearance (like interpolation), but the actual data values are not there.
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