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« Odpowiedź #615 dnia: Październik 05, 2017, 20:50 »
DVD with signatures on way to Saturn
December 16, 2004


Charley Kohlhase (left), and Richard Spehalski, at KSC's Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility.

As it makes its long, lonely journey through the solar system, the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft is carrying more than just science instruments and sophisticated cameras.

Keeping the spacecraft company is the result of a NASA campaign-- a DVD disk placed onboard the spacecraft containing the signatures of more than a half million well-wishers from 81 nations. These signatures of 616,420 people were recorded onto the disk, then strategically tucked into the side of the Cassini spacecraft. The disk is sandwiched by two pieces of aluminum and covered by a specially decorated patch of protective thermal material.

To send signatures into space is not a new concept, but it has never been done on such a widespread scale. Traditionally, spacecraft have carried thin aluminum plates containing scaled down signatures of scientists and engineers involved in creating the project. For example, Voyager 1, the farthest human-made object currently traveling on the outskirts of our solar system, carries six such plates and the Galileo spacecraft, now orbiting Jupiter, carries 11. However, such plates could only hold a maximum of about 900 signatures each -- not enough to fit the signatures of the more than 8,000 people who worked on the Cassini-Huygens mission.

The advent of the digital age gave NASA the opportunity to dramatically increase the number of signatures that could be sent to space. The invention of the CD-ROM and later of the digital videodisc or digital versatile disc -- what we now simply call "DVD" -- provided the ideal solution to increase storage space. Thus, in 1995, Richard Spehalski, then-Project Manager of the Cassini-Huygens Mission, decided to open to the public the chance to send signatures into space.

The public loved the idea. An announcement on Cassini's web site asking for a signed postcard began an enormous flood of mail.

"The response was overwhelming," recalls Charley Kohlhase, then-Science and Mission Design Manager of the Cassini-Huygens mission. "Cards began arriving from around the globe -- as many as 35,000 a week."

The success of the campaign eventually caused logistical problems, and Kohlhase, who spearheaded the signature collection, recruited volunteers from the Pasadena-based Planetary Society to help sort, count and scan all the mail.

"Signatures came from the very young, just learning how to write to the very old, whose hands were no longer steady," said Kohlhase, who also designed the cover of the DVD. "There are many reasons for the outpouring of signatures. Some of us dream of escaping Earth and venturing in the cosmos -- and sending a signature is a way of making such a journey."


The DVD bearing 616,400 digitized signatures of people from 81 nations around the world

The majority of the postcards, 542,020, arrived from the United States, but people from 80 other countries participated, from Ghana to Brazil to Tanzania to New Zealand.

Even celebrities joined the effort, such as actors Patrick Stewart and Chuck Norris. A postcard from Australia was sent by Mary Cassini, a distant descendant of Giovanni Cassini -- one of the first scientists to study Saturn and after whom the mission is named. Taken from old manuscripts, the signatures of both namesakes of the mission, Giovanni Cassini and Christiaan Huygens, are also included on the DVD.

This cooperative campaign to collect signatures lasted more than a year, and in May 1997, five months before the launch of the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft, 10 copies of the DVD were digitally mastered. One copy is on display at JPL's Space Flight Operations Facility, eight copies are in museums across the world and "the" one is billion miles from home and rapidly approaching Saturn.

Once there, the Cassini-Huygens mission will begin a four-year scientific investigation and tour of the vast Saturn system, which will extend the journey of the spacecraft, as well as that amazing number of signatures, an extra 1.6 billion kilometers (about 1 billion miles).

It's an amazing story about how international cooperation can bring so many of us together in our effort to explore the world around us and be a part of many new discoveries.
https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/2803/dvd-with-signatures-on-way-to-saturn/
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« Odpowiedź #616 dnia: Październik 06, 2017, 20:29 »
Ciekawe, czy będzie jakaś zbiorcza publikacja podsumowująca stan wiedzy na temat Saturna, pierścieni i jego księżyców. Hmm, to raczej brzmi jak całe wydanie jakiegoś czasopisma naukowego. :)

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« Odpowiedź #617 dnia: Październik 12, 2017, 21:40 »
Odtworzenie ostatnich momentów sondy.

Reconstructing Cassini's Plunge into Saturn
October 11, 2017

(...) During the final moments of its plunge, Cassini was traveling through Saturn's atmosphere, which was about the same density as the tenuous gas where the International Space Station orbits above Earth. In other words, there's barely any air there at all. Despite the fact that this air pressure is close to being a vacuum, Cassini was traveling about 4.5 times faster than the space station. The higher velocity greatly multiplied the force, or dynamic pressure, that the thin atmosphere exerted on Cassini. It's like the difference between holding your hand outside the window of a car moving at 15 mph versus one moving at 65 mph. (...)


This animation shows the last 30 seconds of Cassini's X- and S-band radio signals as they disappeared from mission control on Sept. 15, 2017. The video has been sped up by a factor of two. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/3126/reconstructing-cassinis-plunge-into-saturn/
https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/resources/7800/
http://www.urania.edu.pl/wiadomosci/zrekonstruowano-ostatnie-chwile-sondy-cassini-3700.html
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« Odpowiedź #618 dnia: Październik 14, 2017, 00:52 »
Metanowe sztormy na Tytanie

Extreme methane rainstorms appear to have a key role in shaping Titan's icy surface
October 13, 2017

(...) The storms create massive floods in terrain that are otherwise deserts. Titan's surface is strikingly similar to Earth's, with flowing rivers that spill into great lakes and seas, and the moon has storm clouds that bring seasonal, monsoon-like downpours, Mitchell said. But Titan's precipitation is liquid methane, not water.

"The most intense methane storms in our climate model dump at least a foot of rain a day, which comes close to what we saw in Houston from Hurricane Harvey this summer," said Mitchell, the principal investigator of UCLA's Titan climate modeling research group. (...)

https://phys.org/news/2017-10-extreme-methane-rainstorms-key-role.html

Polskie Forum Astronautyczne

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« Odpowiedź #619 dnia: Październik 15, 2017, 08:58 »
15.10.1997 o 08:43 z wyrzutni LC-40 Cape Canaveral została wystrzelona Titan 401B/Centaur, która wyniosła  misję Cassini z europejskim lądownikiem Huygens przeznaczonym do badania Tytana.
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1997 October 15 - . 08:43 GMT - . Launch Site: Cape Canaveral. Launch Complex: Cape Canaveral LC40. LV Family: Titan. Launch Vehicle: Titan 401B/Centaur.

Cassini - . Nation: USA. Agency: NASA. Manufacturer: JPL. Class: Outer planets. Type: Outer planets probe. Spacecraft: Cassini. USAF Sat Cat: 25008 . COSPAR: 1997-061A. En route Venus.

Huygens - . Nation: Europe. Agency: NASA Cleveland. Manufacturer: Cannes. Class: Outer planets. Type: Outer planets probe. Spacecraft: Huygens. USAF Sat Cat: 25009 . COSPAR: 1997-061B. Attached to Cassini.
http://www.astronautix.com/o/october15.html
http://www.astronautix.com/c/cassini.html
http://www.astronautix.com/h/huygens.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassini%E2%80%93Huygens
https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassini-Huygens

https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Cassini-Huygens/The_launcher
https://spaceflightnow.com/cassini/
https://www.astronomy.com/science/25-years-ago-cassini-huygens-launches-for-saturn/
https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Cassini-Huygens

Cassini / Huygens 5712 kg (launch, Cassin + Huygens); 2581 kg (Cassini, dry); 348 kg (Huygens)  https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/cassini.htm

DOOMED CASSINI SPACECRAFT LAUNCHED TO CONTROVERSY 20 YEARS AGO
  Posted on September 13, 2017 by GJEP staff



http://globaljusticeecology.org/doomed-cassini-spacecraft-launched-to-controversy-20-years-ago/



Editorial Observer; Imagining the Consequences of Cassini
By Verlyn Klinkenborg Oct. 16, 1997 Opinion

Children of my generation grew up pinioned between two technological tensions: the patriotic optimism of President Kennedy's manned-space program and fear of nuclear war -- epitomized, when I was too young to understand it, by the Cuban missile crisis. Nuclear fear was, perhaps, the more realistic of these two emotions. It conjured up a terrible post-conflict America that wasn't actual, but that could become actual at any moment. With a few stunning exceptions -- Alan Shepard's flight, John Glenn's orbit, the moon landing -- the optimism evoked by the space program was always being deferred. Even its long-range rationale -- the future colonization of space -- was a deferral of sorts. The future that NASA envisioned had to be imagined to be believed, as did the future envisioned by the most persuasive of anti-nuclear activists. But for some reason it is nearly always easier to imagine your fears than your hopes.

These two tensions converge in a single NASA mission, the launch yesterday of the Saturn-bound Cassini spacecraft, which NASA calls ''the largest, heaviest and most complex interplanetary spacecraft ever built.'' Cassini will carry 72.3 pounds of plutonium-238 in three radioisotope thermoelectric generators (R.T.G.'s) to power the probe. In scale alone, this spacecraft is something of a relic, a reminder of a more politically solvent NASA. The furor that surrounds its plutonium-powered R.T.G.'s is also something of a relic, harking back to a time, not that long ago, when the thought of nuclear war was still the gold standard of sobriety. Critics of the Cassini mission worry, in the words of Karl Grossman, author of ''The Wrong Stuff,'' that ''if the Cassini probe blows up, we will be in a heap of trouble, as plutonium could rain from the skies.'' NASA claims that the potential danger posed by the plutonium on Cassini is not large, and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy agrees, arguing that ''the important benefits of this scientific mission outweigh the potential risks.''

I prefer even the soft patter of anti-nuclear rhetoric to plutonium rain, but I also want to know what Cassini will be able to tell scientists when it finally reaches Saturn. The kind of conflict surrounding Cassini is nearly always read by one side as the struggle between democracy and institutional science. But the struggle really lies between the democratic right of oversight in technological matters, which has been grievously neglected in the past, and the scientific impulse, a restless, altogether human curiosity about the physical universe. Democracy and science are not antithetical. Both work best when practiced skeptically, in company with each other.

Science can be simple, and it can be complex. It can be performed by individuals on tiny budgets and by bureaucracies as curiously intricate as NASA and the Department of Defense. Some of the scientific enterprises that lie ahead of humanity, like many in the past, will merit more than scrutiny; they will deserve rebuke. All of them will require risk assessment and oversight. But to assess risk you must be able to gauge the value of the knowledge -- always an unknown -- for which risk is undertaken. That is the hard part -- imagining hope and fear with equal realism. It's easier to weigh the danger in Cassini than what it may reveal about Saturn. But that's no reason Cassini shouldn't fly.

''Long before a thousand years have passed,'' Freeman Dyson writes in ''Imagined Worlds,'' ''life will have spread over the solar system.'' I had hoped, when I was a third grader, to be on Mars by the time I was 24, an age that seemed to me then to lie deep in the beyond of time. Oddly, the future I imagined at age 8 was one in which humans were merely more widely distributed across the planets than they are now. But almost a whole new cosmology has materialized since then, revealing a universe that is older, larger, stranger and more dynamic than anyone could have guessed in 1960. Thanks in part to missions like Cassini and the Hubble Space Telescope, I live, you might say, in a completely different universe than I did when I was a kid, and that may be space travel enough for me.

https://www.nytimes.com/1997/10/16/opinion/editorial-observer-imagining-the-consequences-of-cassini.html

Oct. 15, 1997, Launch of Cassini Spacecraft to Saturn
OCT 15, 2015


On Oct. 15 1997, a seven-year journey to the ringed planet Saturn began with the liftoff of a Titan IVB/Centaur carrying the Cassini orbiter and its attached Huygens probe. This spectacular streak shot was taken from Hangar AF on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, with a solid rocket booster retrieval ship in the foreground.
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/oct-15-1997-launch-of-cassini-spacecraft-saturn/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cGqfIukapmYFilm niedostępny



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#OTD 15 October 1997, the international NASA/ESA/ASI #Cassini/#Huygens mission to the #Saturn system🪐was launched from @NASAKennedy@esascience@ASI_spazio@NASAhistory
👉https://esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Cassini-Huygens
https://x.com/ESA_History/status/1713569842626797942
https://twitter.com/NASAhistory/status/1713615730606850167
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Get in, loser! We're going to Saturn 🪐
A 7-year journey to the ringed planet Saturn began #OTD in 1997 with the liftoff of the Titan IVB/Centaur launch vehicle carrying the Cassini orbiter and the Huygens probe.
Learn about Cassini's discoveries: https://go.nasa.gov/3rEVVbC
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« Odpowiedź #620 dnia: Październik 20, 2017, 00:18 »
Ciekawe, czy będzie jakaś zbiorcza publikacja podsumowująca stan wiedzy na temat Saturna, pierścieni i jego księżyców. Hmm, to raczej brzmi jak całe wydanie jakiegoś czasopisma naukowego. :)
Dobrze by było poczytać taką publikację, ale nie byłoby to ostateczne podsumowanie naszej wiedzy o systemie Saturna z uwagi na ciągle pojawiające się nowe ustalenia naukowe.

Na stronie ESA można w większym skrócie prześledzić historię misji w artykułach.
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/Cassini-Huygens/
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« Odpowiedź #621 dnia: Październik 20, 2017, 00:35 »
Pojawiło się nieco nowej wiedzy jak np. nieoczekiwane odkrycie metanu w pierścieniach Saturna lub nowe spojrzenie na długotrwałe utrzymywanie się systemu pierścieni planety.

Fresh Findings From Cassini
OCTOBER 16, 2017

The spacecraft's Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer (INMS) returned a host of first-ever direct measurements of the components in Saturn's upper atmosphere, which stretches almost to the rings. From these observations, the team sees evidence that molecules from the rings are raining down onto the atmosphere. This influx of material from the rings was expected, but INMS data show hints of ingredients more complex than just water, which makes up the bulk of the rings' composition. In particular, the instrument detected methane, a volatile molecule that scientists would not expect to be abundant in the rings or found so high in Saturn's atmosphere.


Key among the questions scientists hope to answer using data from Cassini are the age and origins of the rings. Theoretical modeling has shown that, without forces to confine them, the rings would spread out over hundreds of millions of years -- much younger than Saturn itself. This spreading happens because faster-moving particles that orbit closer to Saturn occasionally collide with slower particles on slightly farther-out orbits. When this happens, some momentum from the faster particles is transferred to the slower particles, speeding the latter up in their orbit and causing them to move farther outward. The inverse happens to the faster, inner particles.

https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=6976

To keep Saturn’s A ring contained, its moons stand united
By Blaine Friedlander   |  October 16, 2017

For three decades, astronomers thought that only Saturn’s moon Janus confined the planet’s A ring – the largest and farthest of the visible rings.

http://news.cornell.edu/stories/2017/10/keep-saturns-ring-contained-its-moons-stand-united
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« Odpowiedź #622 dnia: Październik 20, 2017, 01:10 »
NASA Team Finds Noxious Ice Cloud on Saturn’s Moon Titan
Oct. 18, 2017

Researchers with NASA’s Cassini mission found evidence of a toxic hybrid ice in a wispy cloud high above the south pole of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan.

The finding is a new demonstration of the complex chemistry occurring in Titan’s atmosphere—in this case, cloud formation in the giant moon’s stratosphere—and part of a collection of processes that ultimately helps deliver a smorgasbord of organic molecules to Titan’s surface.


This view of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, is among the last images the Cassini spacecraft sent to Earth before it plunged into the giant planet’s atmosphere. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

Invisible to the human eye, the cloud was detected at infrared wavelengths by the Composite Infrared Spectrometer, or CIRS, on the Cassini spacecraft. Located at an altitude of about 100 to 130 miles (160 to 210 kilometers), the cloud is far above the methane rain clouds of Titan’s troposphere, or lowest region of the atmosphere. The new cloud covers a large area near the south pole, from about 75 to 85 degrees south latitude.

Laboratory experiments were used to find a chemical mixture that matched the cloud’s spectral signature -- the chemical fingerprint measured by the CIRS instrument. The experiments determined that the exotic ice in the cloud is a combination of the simple organic molecule hydrogen cyanide together with the large ring-shaped chemical benzene. The two chemicals appear to have condensed at the same time to form ice particles, rather than one being layered on top of the other.

“This cloud represents a new chemical formula of ice in Titan’s atmosphere,” said Carrie Anderson of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, a CIRS co-investigator. “What’s interesting is that this noxious ice is made of two molecules that condensed together out of a rich mixture of gases at the south pole.”

Previously, CIRS data helped identify hydrogen cyanide ice in clouds over Titan's south pole, as well as other toxic chemicals in the moon's stratosphere.

In Titan’s stratosphere, a global circulation pattern sends a current of warm gases from the hemisphere where it’s summer to the winter pole. This circulation reverses direction when the seasons change, leading to a buildup of clouds at whichever pole is experiencing winter. Shortly after its arrival at Saturn, Cassini found evidence of this phenomenon at Titan’s north pole. Later, near the end of the spacecraft’s 13 years in the Saturn system, a similar cloud buildup was spotted at the south pole.

The simple way to think about the cloud structure is that different types of gas will condense into ice clouds at different altitudes, almost like layers in a parfait dessert. Exactly which cloud condenses where depends on how much vapor is present and on the temperatures, which become colder and colder at lower altitudes in the stratosphere. The reality is more complicated, however, because each type of cloud forms over a range of altitudes, so it’s possible for some ices to condense simultaneously, or co-condense.

Anderson and colleagues use CIRS to sort through the complex set of infrared fingerprints from many molecules in Titan’s atmosphere. The instrument separates infrared light into its component colors, like raindrops creating a rainbow, and measures the strengths of the signal at the different wavelengths.

“CIRS acts as a remote-sensing thermometer and as a chemical probe, picking out the heat radiation emitted by individual gases in an atmosphere,” said F. Michael Flasar, the CIRS principal investigator at Goddard. “And the instrument does it all remotely, while passing by a planet or moon.”

The new cloud, which the researchers call the high-altitude south polar cloud, has a distinctive and very strong chemical signature that showed up in three sets of Titan observations taken from July to November 2015. Because Titan’s seasons last seven Earth years, it was late fall at the south pole the whole time.

The spectral signatures of the ices did not match those of any individual chemical, so the team began laboratory experiments to simultaneously condense mixtures of gases. Using an ice chamber that simulates conditions in Titan’s stratosphere, they tested pairs of chemicals that had infrared fingerprints in the right part of the spectrum.

At first, they let one gas condense before the other. But the best result was achieved by introducing both hydrogen cyanide and benzene into the chamber and allowing them to condense at the same time. By itself, benzene doesn’t have a distinctive far-infrared fingerprint. When it was allowed to co-condense with hydrogen cyanide, however, the far-infrared fingerprint of the co-condensed ice was a close match for the CIRS observations.

Additional studies will be needed to determine the structure of the co-condensed ice particles. The researchers expect them to be lumpy and disorderly, rather than well-defined crystals.

Anderson and colleagues previously found a similar example of co-condensed ice in CIRS data from 2005. Those observations were made near the north pole, about two years after the winter solstice in Titan’s northern hemisphere. That cloud formed at a much lower altitude, below 93 miles (150 kilometers), and had a different chemical composition: hydrogen cyanide and cyanoacetylene, one of the more complex organic molecules found in Titan’s atmosphere.

Anderson attributes the differences in the two clouds to seasonal variations at the north and south poles. The northern cloud was spotted about two years after the northern winter solstice, but the southern cloud was spotted about two years before the southern winter solstice. It’s possible that the mixtures of gases were slightly different in the two cases or that temperatures had warmed up a bit by the time the north polar cloud was spotted, or both.

“One of the advantages of Cassini was that we were able to flyby Titan again and again over the course of the thirteen-year mission to see changes over time,” said Anderson. “This is a big part of the value of a long-term mission.” (...)
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2017/nasa-team-finds-noxious-ice-cloud-on-saturns-moon-titan

http://www.pulskosmosu.pl/2017/10/19/nasa-odkrywa-chmury-lodu-trujacego-na-tytanie/
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« Odpowiedź #623 dnia: Listopad 07, 2017, 14:42 »
Nowe symulacje wyjaśniają aktywność Enceladusa trwającą od miliardów lat.

HEATING OCEAN MOON ENCELADUS FOR BILLIONS OF YEARS
6 November 2017

(...) The tidal effect from Saturn is thought to be at the origin of the eruptions deforming the icy shell by push-pull motions as the moon follows an elliptical path around the giant planet. But the energy produced by tidal friction in the ice, by itself, would be too weak to counterbalance the heat loss seen from the ocean – the globe would freeze within 30 million years.

As Cassini has shown, the moon is clearly still extremely active, suggesting something else is happening.

“Where Enceladus gets the sustained power to remain active has always been a bit of mystery, but we've now considered in greater detail how the structure and composition of the moon's rocky core could play a key role in generating the necessary energy,” says lead author Gaël Choblet from the University of Nantes in France.

In the new simulations the core is made of unconsolidated, easily deformable, porous rock that water can easily permeate. As such, cool liquid water from the ocean can seep into the core and gradually heat up through tidal friction between sliding rock fragments, as it gets deeper.

Water circulates in the core and then rises because it is hotter than the surroundings. This process ultimately transfers heat to the base of the ocean in narrow plumes where it interacts strongly with the rocks. At the seafloor, these plumes vent into the cooler ocean.


One seafloor hotspot alone is predicted to release as much as 5 GW of energy, roughly corresponding to the annual geothermal power consumed in Iceland. (...)

http://m.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/Cassini-Huygens/Heating_ocean_moon_Enceladus_for_billions_of_years

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« Odpowiedź #624 dnia: Listopad 07, 2017, 17:22 »
Ciekawe! Czyli szanse dla życia jeszcze bardziej rosną!

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« Odpowiedź #625 dnia: Listopad 07, 2017, 17:39 »
Dziwne by było żeby Enceladus od miliardów lat nie był ogrzewany przez siły pływowe Staurna pod warunkiem, że jego orbita w tym czasie niewiele się zmieniła. Przecież miliardy lat temu Saturn również był duży i jego grawitacja działała  :)

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« Odpowiedź #626 dnia: Listopad 22, 2017, 13:48 »
Powoli wyjaśnia się dlaczego w pierwszej połowie obecnej dekady doszło do nagłego ochłodzenia w okolicach południowego bieguna Tytana:

Some heating was seen high in Titan's southern atmosphere at the very start of winter there in 2009. However, "it then quickly got surprisingly cold after a few years," with temperatures down to minus 243 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 153 degrees Celsius) seen there until 2015, "which is very cold, even for Titan's stratosphere," Teanby said. [...]

To find out what caused this surprising cooling, Teanby and his colleagues analyzed data Cassini gathered over the past 13 years. They focused on the chemistry and temperature of Titan's south polar winter vortex.

The research team's findings suggested that trace gases that make up mere millionths of Titan's atmosphere may explain this unexpected cooling. "Previously, we thought these gases had quite a minor role, so this was a big surprise," Teanby said.

Sunlight can trigger exotic chemical reactions high up in Titan's atmosphere, generating short-lived compounds such as ethane, acetylene, hydrogen cyanide and cyanoacetylene. These molecules absorb heat from Titan and radiate it out into outer space in the form of infrared rays, cooling it down.

"Atmospheric circulation can move these gases around, concentrating them in certain locations, particularly the poles," Teanby said.


https://www.space.com/38861-saturn-moon-titan-cold-vortex.html

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« Odpowiedź #627 dnia: Listopad 26, 2017, 19:33 »
Z mozaiki zdjęć powstał pożegnalny obraz Saturna.

Cassini Image Mosaic: A Farewell to Saturn
Nov. 21, 2017


After more than 13 years at Saturn, and with its fate sealed, NASA's Cassini spacecraft bid farewell to the Saturnian system by firing the shutters of its wide-angle camera and capturing this last, full mosaic of Saturn and its rings two days before the spacecraft's dramatic plunge into the planet's atmosphere.
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute


In a fitting farewell to the planet that had been its home for over 13 years, the Cassini spacecraft took one last, lingering look at Saturn and its splendid rings during the final leg of its journey and snapped a series of images that has been assembled into a new mosaic.

Cassini’s wide-angle camera acquired 42 red, green and blue images, covering the planet and its main rings from one end to the other, on Sept. 13, 2017. Imaging scientists stitched these frames together to make a natural color view. The scene also includes the moons Prometheus, Pandora, Janus, Epimetheus, Mimas and Enceladus.

There is much to remember and celebrate in marking the end of the mission. Cassini's exploration of Saturn and its environs was deep, comprehensive and historic. (...)
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/cassini-image-mosaic-a-farewell-to-saturn

https://science.nasa.gov/missions/cassini/cassini-image-mosaic-a-farewell-to-saturn/
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Odp: Cassini
« Odpowiedź #628 dnia: Grudzień 15, 2017, 19:39 »
Opublikowano pracę na temat jonosfery Saturna na podstawie 11 z 22 końcowych orbit sondy Cassini.
M. in okazało się, że pierścienie A i B rzucając cienie na Saturna powodują ,  że w zacienionym obszarze  promieniowanie ultrafioletowe pochodzące ze Słońca jest blokowane.

Cassini may be dead, but a new era of Saturn science has just begun
by Deborah Netburn, Los Angeles Times

For example, the A and B rings cast shadows on the planet that are opaque enough to block the sun's ultraviolet radiation from hitting the atmosphere. Ultraviolet radiation can knock an electron off an atom and allow it to be free floating. Therefore, these shadowy regions have less electron density than other parts of the planet.
But that's only part of the story.

"We see other types of effects that appear to be relative to the rings, but we don't fully understand them yet," Kurth said. "Further analysis is due on that point."

The researchers also report that ring rain does not have a significant effect on the ionosphere at the equatorial regions of the planet, where the measurements in the new study were made.


http://www.latimes.com/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-saturn-ring-rain-20171211-story.html

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Odp: Cassini
« Odpowiedź #629 dnia: Styczeń 04, 2018, 19:51 »
11 lat zdjęć z sondy Cassini (2004-2015)
BY KRZYSZTOF KANAWKA ON 4 STYCZNIA 2018

(...) Przez lata sonda przesyłała tysiące zdjęć na Ziemie. Poniższe nagranie prezentuje 11 lat misji Cassini (2004-2015) i 341805 zdjęć Saturna, pierścieni i jego księżyców. Poniższe nagranie trwa prawie 4 godziny – pomimo bardzo szybkiej prezentacji poszczególnych zdjęć.



11 lat sondy Cassini u Saturna / Credits – NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute, The Wall Street Journal’s @JonKeegan (...)

http://kosmonauta.net/2018/01/11-lat-zdjec-z-sondy-cassini-2004-2015/#comment-99575
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Odp: Cassini
« Odpowiedź #629 dnia: Styczeń 04, 2018, 19:51 »