
Oh. My. God.

This terrain on Enceladus bears a very stunning resemblance to the ridges of Europa. It's jaw-dropping...!

Michael Kilderry wrote:Looks more like a wrinkled sheet to me. Europa looks far less strange.
It's Saturnshine on the left, but the background is overexposed space rather than Saturn itself. This particular image was taken 02/17/2005 12:15 UTC according to the raw image archive timestamps, when Saturn should be far left of Enceladus as seen here, not behind it. Even though Celestia's knowledge of Cassini's position may be a little imprecise, it shouldn't matter too much at this distance (over 300,000 km).Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/raw/raw-images-details.cfm?feiImageID=32339
Another very cool image. I think the overexposed bit on the right is lit by sunlight, and the crescent on the left is Saturnshine? (Saturn's in the background).
Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:Notice the dark arcuate feature near the day/night terminator... big crater rim or just a ridge? I think it's the latter...
Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:Notice the dark arcuate feature near the day/night terminator... big crater rim or just a ridge? I think it's the latter...
andersa wrote:It's Saturnshine on the left, but the background is overexposed space rather than Saturn itself.
Matt McIrvin wrote:andersa wrote:It's Saturnshine on the left, but the background is overexposed space rather than Saturn itself.
If that is so, how could the dark part of Enceladus possibly be that much darker than space?