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Unmanned Spaceflight.com > Outer Solar System > Saturn > Cassini Huygens > Cassini's ongoing mission and raw images
belleraphon1
All...

Dione images coming down....look at the north pole

http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/photos/raw/rawi...?imageID=337019
belleraphon1
Sorry Admins...

was so excited when I created the topic forgot to add topic description "Aug 7 - Aug 28 '15" and do not know how blink.gif

Craig
angel1801
That impact basin is called Evander and is centred at about 57 degrees south latitude , 140 degrees west longitude.
belleraphon1
So No where near the north pole... two sorrys
Ian R
Two views of Enceladus (NAC RGB), the second having been enhanced with prime number tone mapping:

Click to view attachment
Ian R
Click to view attachment
Ian R
This 14-frame, clear-filtered mosaic of Tethys is essentially a tale of two massive impact features, and a long catenae-like chasm.

Click to view attachment

Odysseus dominates the view at right, while the the left 'horn' of the crescent seems to have a chunk missing: this is Melanthius viewed from a very low angle.
Herobrine
N00245305 to N00245336
(Click for GIF)
Click to view attachment
jasedm
Thanks for those mosaics Ian - fabulous detail on Odysseus!
Ian R
Thanks Jase! Hope you enjoy this one too:

http://s11.postimg.org/wqlwgk8rl/Tethys_IR_UV_GRN.jpg
alan
I wonder about the mound to the left of center of the basin, some cryo-volcanism following the impact?
Click to view attachment
jccwrt
Really nice storm watch observation from the 20th:


Crescent Saturn - Rev 220 by Justin Cowart, on Flickr

Appears Cassini also took some narrow-angle images of the north polar region, looks like it caught a couple of large circular storms in one set of images.
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