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Cassini encounters Hyperion
Saturday, 27 August 2011 09:35
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Solar system - Saturn

The Saturn-Moon Hyperion

NASA's Cassini spacecraft captured new views of Saturn's oddly shaped moon Hyperion during its encounter with this cratered body on Thursday, Aug. 25.

Hyperion is a small moon -- just 168 miles (270 kilometers) across. It has an irregular shape and surface appearance, and it rotates chaotically as it tumbles along in orbit. This odd rotation prevented scientists from predicting exactly what terrain the spacecraft's cameras would image during this flyby.
The Saturn-Moon Hyperion
However, this flyby's closeness has likely allowed Cassini's cameras to map new territory. At the very least, it will help scientists improve color measurements of the moon. It will also help them determine how the moon's brightness changes as lighting and viewing conditions change, which can provide insight into the texture of the surface. The color measurements provide additional information about different materials on the moon's deeply pitted surface.


Cassini's closest encounter with Hyperion was on September 26, 2005, when the spacecraft flew approximately 500km above the moon's surface.  Cassini's next flyby of Hyperion will be on Sept. 16, 2011, when it passes the tumbling moon at a distance of about 58 000km.

The latest raw images of Hyperion are online at: http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/photos/raw/ .