News on Saturn
- The small Saturn-moon Phoebe looks more like a failed planet than a moon
- The origin and age of Titans atmosphere
- Saturns constantly changing F-ring
- Lakes on Titan is like a Namibia mudflat
- Historic clase-encounter with Saturn-moon Tethys
- Measurments of Saturns Aurora and magnetic field
- Saturn streches teh surface on its moon Enceladus
- New amazing images of ice-moon Rhea
- Discovery of thin oxygen atmosphere around Dione
- Titans changing wheather
- Cassini's closest Dione flyby
- The vast sand-dune plains on Titan
- The making of Saturns rings
- The shepparding moons
- Is Titans climate stable?
- Now model explains Titans lakes and storms
- Bad wheather on saturn-moon Titan
- Saturn moon may affect planet's magnetosphere
- Alignment of Saturnian moons
- Cassini only 99km over Saturn-moon Dione
- Cassiini to make 2 close moon-flybys in 1 day
- New higher resolution images of Saturn-moon Enceladus
- Saturns interplanetary dust-storm
- Satirns giant storm has lasted 200 days
- Comets gave Titan atmosphere
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Cassiini to make 2 close moon-flybys in 1 day
Tuesday, 13 December 2011 14:56
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| Solar system - Saturn |
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In an action-packed day and a half, the Cassini spacecraft will be making its closest swoop over the surface of Saturn's moon Dione and scrutinizing the atmosphere of Titan, Saturn's largest moon. The closest approach to Dione, about 99km above the surface, will take place on Dec. 12. One of the questions Cassini scientists will be asking during this flyby is whether Dione's surface shows any signs of activity. Understanding Dione's internal structure will help address that question, so Cassini's radio science instrument will learn how highly structured the moon's interior is by measuring variations in the moon's gravitational tug on the spacecraft. The composite infrared spectrometer instrument will also look for heat emissions along fractures on the moon's surface. Cassini will also be probing whether Dione, like another Saturnian moon, Rhea, has a tenuous atmosphere. Scientists expect a Dionean atmosphere – if there is one – to be much more ethereal than even Rhea's. Research published in journal Geophysical Research Letters and led by Sven Simon, a Cassini magnetometer team member at the University of Cologne, Germany, found magnetic field disturbances around Dione, hinting at a tenuous atmosphere. But scientists hope to get stronger confirmation by "tasting" the space around the moon with Cassini's ion and neutral mass spectrometer. On Cassini's journey out from Dione toward Titan, the imaging science subsystem will turn back to look at Dione's distinctive, wispy fractures and a ridge called Janiculum Dorsa. Cassini will approach within about 3.600km of the Titan surface on Dec. 13. At Titan, the composite infrared spectrometer will be making measurements to understand how the seasonal transition from spring to summer affects wind patterns in the atmosphere near Titan's north pole. It will also search for mist. The visual and infrared mapping spectrometer and imaging science subsystem will be observing the same equatorial deserts where the imaging science subsystem saw sudden and dramatic surface changes last year, when Titan was experiencing early northern spring. One possibly theory is that rainstorms caused these changes. As Cassini recedes from Titan, the imaging cameras will also continue to observe the moon for another day to monitor any new weather systems. 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 mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington.
Source: http://www.nasa.gov/cassini |




