Tethys and Dione

General physics and astronomy discussions not directly related to Celestia
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lostfisherman
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Tethys and Dione

Post #1by lostfisherman » 28.10.2004, 14:18

Something relatively normal too look at after tryng to guess the nature of those Titan pics.

Tethys replete with big crater (Oddyseus I think)

http://saturn1.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/ ... geID=26004


Streaky Dione

http://saturn1.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/ ... geID=26000
Regards, Losty

Evil Dr Ganymede
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Post #2by Evil Dr Ganymede » 28.10.2004, 14:59

I think my brain is overloading from the torrent of cool images coming back from Cassini... 8O

Michael Kilderry
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Post #3by Michael Kilderry » 29.10.2004, 07:33

I think after all of the Titan images brought back from Cassini, it's nice to have my favourite moon Tethys in the spotlight for once. The big crater resembles an eyeball.

Michael Kilderry :)
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Ynjevi
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Post #4by Ynjevi » 29.10.2004, 16:14

Uhh... Somebody said Tethys? 8O

tony873004
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Post #5by tony873004 » 29.10.2004, 16:58

Tethys is very interesting for another reason. It holds 2 smaller moons captive in its L4 and L5 Lagrange points. Telesto and Calypso share an orbit with Tethys, orbiting Saturn 60 degrees ahead of and 60 degrees behind Tethys.

Evil Dr Ganymede
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Post #6by Evil Dr Ganymede » 29.10.2004, 17:00

tony873004 wrote:Tethys is very interesting for another reason. It holds 2 smaller moons captive in its L4 and L5 Lagrange points. Telesto and Calypso share an orbit with Tethys, orbiting Saturn 60 degrees ahead of and 60 degrees behind Tethys.


I wonder if Cassini is going to image those - they're a bit out of the way...

The new Tethys images look nifty. The degree of topographic relaxation on the craters is interesting...


Topic author
lostfisherman
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Post #8by lostfisherman » 31.10.2004, 15:58

I'm not sure this is worth its own thread, so I'll tack it here. An interesting picture of Saturns F ring, buried within the raw imaging site.

http://saturn1.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/ ... geID=26447
Regards, Losty

Ynjevi
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Post #9by Ynjevi » 31.10.2004, 18:29

lostfisherman wrote:I'm not sure this is worth its own thread, so I'll tack it here. An interesting picture of Saturns F ring, buried within the raw imaging site.


Yeah, I spotted that too.

The irregular arc is probably a "crescent" of Prometheus, you can see material streaming to it from the F-ring. Same phenomenon was spotted after the Saturn Orbit Insertion.

Evil Dr Ganymede
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Post #10by Evil Dr Ganymede » 01.11.2004, 06:19

I noticed that too... I was wondering what that was...!


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