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Cassini
Pinpoints Source of Jets on Saturn's Moon Enceladus
Friday, August 15, 2008
Hi-Res
and Full Caption
This
sweeping mosaic of Saturn's moon Enceladus provides broad
regional context for the ultra-sharp, close-up views
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Credit:
NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
In a feat of interplanetary
sharpshooting, NASA's Cassini spacecraft has pinpointed precisely
where the icy jets erupt from the surface of Saturn's
geologically active moon Enceladus.
New carefully
targeted pictures reveal exquisite details in the prominent south
polar "tiger stripe" fractures from which the jets
emanate. The images show the fractures are about 300 meters (980
feet) deep, with V-shaped inner walls. The outer flanks of some
of the fractures show extensive deposits of fine material. Finely
fractured terrain littered with blocks of ice tens of meters in
size and larger (the size of small houses) surround the
fractures.
"This is the mother lode for us,"
said Carolyn Porco, Cassini imaging team leader at the Space
Science Institute, Boulder, Colo. "A place that may
ultimately reveal just exactly what kind of environment --
habitable or not -- we have within this tortured little moon."
One highly anticipated result of this flyby was finding
the location within the fractures from which the jets blast icy
particles, water vapor and trace organics into space. Scientists
are now studying the nature and intensity of this process on
Enceladus, and its effects on surrounding terrain. This
information, coupled with observations by Cassini's other
instruments, may answer the question of whether reservoirs of
liquid water exist beneath the surface.
The
high-resolution images were acquired during an Aug. 11, 2008,
flyby of Enceladus, as Cassini sped past the icy moon at 64,000
kilometers per hour (40,000 miles per hour). A special technique,
dubbed "skeet shooting" by the imaging team, was
developed to cancel out the high speed of the moon relative to
Cassini and obtain the ultra-sharp views.
"Knowing
exactly where to point, at just the right time, was critical to
this event," said Paul Helfenstein, Cassini imaging team
associate at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY., who developed and
used the skeet-shoot technique to design the image sequence. "The
challenge is equivalent to trying to capture a sharp, unsmeared
picture of a distant roadside billboard with a telephoto lens out
the window of a speeding car."
Helfenstein said that
from Cassini's point of view, "Enceladus was streaking
across the sky so quickly that the spacecraft had no hope of
tracking any feature on its surface. Our best option was to point
the spacecraft far ahead of Enceladus, spin the spacecraft and
camera as fast as possible in the direction of Enceladus'
predicted path, and let Enceladus overtake us at a time when we
could match its motion across the sky, snapping images along the
way."
For scientists, having the combination of
high-resolution snapshots and broader images showing the whole
region is critical for understanding what may be powering the
activity on Enceladus.
"There appears to have been
extensive fallout of icy particles to the ground, along some of
the fractures, even in areas that lie between two jet source
locations, though any immediate effects of presently active jets
are subtle," said Porco.
Imaging scientists suggest
that once warm vapor rises from underground to the cold surface
through narrow channels, the icy particles may condense and seal
off an active vent. New jets may then appear elsewhere along the
same fracture.
"For the first time, we are beginning
to understand how freshly erupted surface deposits differ from
older deposits," said Helfenstein, an icy moons expert.
"Over geologic time, the eruptions have clearly moved up and
down the lengths of the tiger stripes."
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 Science Mission Directorate, Washington. The Cassini
orbiter and its two onboard cameras were designed, developed and
assembled at JPL. The imaging team is based at the Space Science
Institute, Boulder, Colo.
Source:
NASA / JPL

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