Saturn at Equinox

How would Saturn look if its ring plane pointed right at the Sun? Before last month, nobody knew. Every 15 years, as seen from Earth, Saturn’s rings point toward the Earth and appear to disappear. The disappearing rings are no longer a mystery — Saturn’s rings are known to be so thin and the Earth is so near the Sun that when the rings point toward the Sun, they also point nearly edge-on at the Earth. Fortunately, in this third millennium, humanity is advanced enough to have a spacecraft that can see the rings during equinox from the side. Last month, that Saturn-orbiting spacecraft, Cassini, was able to snap a series of unprecedented pictures of Saturn’s rings during equinox. A digital composite of 75 such images is shown above. The rings appear unusually dark, and a very thin ring shadow line can be made out on Saturn’s cloud-tops. Objects sticking out of the ring plane are brightly illuminated and cast long shadows. Inspection of these images may help humanity understand the specific sizes of Saturn’s ring particles and the general dynamics of orbital motion.

via Astronomy Picture of the Day

  1. Saturn After Equinox
  2. Perceiving Saturn’s Rings to Slice Titan
  3. Today Planet Earth Passes Through the Plane of Saturn’s Rings
  4. Salt in Saturn’s E-Ring
  5. Saturn’s Hexagon-Shaped Jet Stream


Leave a Reply

NEW RELEASES


  • Black / Saturn Never Sleeps Black / Saturn Never Sleeps

    New release! A 3 song ep and taste of our full record set for release in early January. Black is [...]

  • Intentions / King Britt Intentions / King Britt

    Saturn Never Sleeps presents Intentions by King Britt, the first in the SNS Ambient series. The making of Intentions was [...]