Which planet does Tethys orbit again?
I do admit, I’m terrible with names, but I never forget a face. In this case, the face I didn’t forget was a little moon orbiting Saturn (it’s the one that looks like the Death Star from Star Wars). However, after seeing this photo, I doubt I’ll ever forget Tethys’ name again.
In a photo snapped by the awesome Cassini Equinox mission back in November, the little moon with characteristic impact crater carved into its crust can be seen to be drifting behind Titan. Tethys only disappears for 18 minutes behind Titan’s thick atmosphere, but it was enough to ignite my interest in the icy world.
It’s strange how a simple photograph and perfect timing can ignite the imagination, as I doubt “just another moon shot” would have the same effect. No, this is a moon drifting in front of another moon as seen by a veteran spaceship orbiting the second largest planet in the solar system millions of miles away. Sometimes words are insufficient to describe the enormity of what we are doing in space.
So, sod the words and look at this, you won’t be disappointed:
And 18 minutes later:
Lovely.
Source and full-res images: NASA, Discovery News
I know this isn't necessarily the right post for this comment, but why does everyone seem to latch on to the 2012 solar flare doomsday theory like is is absolutely going to happen. Are there even any odds that this will happen?
there was a pastor who predicted doomsday on 23rd may nothing happend and he said it was a technical counting error he made
This is a perfect capture of a moon orbiting a planet. And right, words are not enough to describe the greatness we can see in the outer space.-Contributor: Pregnancy Miracle Thoughts
Let me know when the picture shows Tethys actually hitting Titan, now that would be cool…
16 European countries and the United States make up the team responsible for designing, building, flying and collecting data from the Cassini orbiter and Huygens probe.