Saturn’s Glorious Dark Side
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Posted
Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012, at 8:00 AM ET
I don’t say this very often, but drop whatever it is you’re doing
(unless you’re holding another human or a priceless crystal vase) and
click this image to embiggen it. Because holy wow.
Midnight on Saturn. Click to encronosenate, or download the huge 6,700 x 3,100 pixel version.
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
That is Saturn, as seen by the Cassini spacecraft
on Oct. 17, 2012. It’s a mosaic of 60 images (taken in violet, red, and
infrared light seen here in false color), methodically stitched
together to produce this jaw-dropping view, and you absolutely
positively must grab the bigger, higher-resolution version. It's stunning.
There’s a lot going on here, so let me explain. In fact, let me number these items for you to make it easier!
1) Cassini was almost directly behind Saturn when these pictures were
taken; that is, Saturn was directly between the spacecraft and the Sun.
Cassini was deep in Saturn’s shadow, and the visible half of the planet
itself is almost entirely dark. In other words: You’re seeing the night
side of Saturn.
2) The rings are in full sunlight, and we see them from “below”,
looking up. The rings at the bottom of the picture are farther away; you
can see the disk of Saturn blocking them.
Saturn by the numbers.
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
3) The rings near the top are closer to us, coming around into Saturn’s dark side.
4) In fact, the shadow of the planet itself cuts across the rings!
5) The glow on the planet’s dark side (seen as green here) is
sunlight reflected from the rings onto the planet’s atmosphere. If you
were floating there, above Saturn’s clouds, you’d see the rings off to
the side brilliantly illuminated by the Sun; that light is what’s
illuminating Saturn. Ringlight! It’s like our own bright Moon lighting
up the dark part of the Earth at night.
6) The dark bands going across the planet are the rings themselves,
seen in silhouette. This is the part I had to wrap my brain around, and
draw myself some diagrams. The cloudtops of Saturn are lit by the parts
of the ring in sunlight (#5), but the arc of rings in Saturn’s shadow
block our view of the gently illuminated cloud tops.
7) The bright arc of teal light (though remember, this is false
color) going around the planet is sunlight scattered by Saturn’s clouds.
Saturn isn’t solid; it’s a gas giant, and sunlight can get through the
thinnest, highest-altitude part of the cloud layer. It gets bent a bit
toward Cassini, so we see it. This is the same as a spoon looking bent
when it sits in a glass of water; light gets bent, or refracted, when
passing from one medium to another, like air to water, or the vacuum of
space to an atmosphere.
8) The outermost ring of Saturn—the E ring—is
faint and diffuse, but we can see it here as a fuzzy glow. It’s
normally difficult to spot, but with the glare of Saturn so diminished
in this picture, it’s far easier to see.
9) Two moons are visible on Saturn’s left side, too (I put in lines pointing at them): Tethys, lower and to the left, and Enceladus, above and the right.
All in all, a helluva view, ain’t it?
I’ll note that in September 2006, Cassini sent back a similar view. There,
you could see the tiny dot of Earth. In this newer picture, the
spacecraft was closer to Saturn than it was for the earlier shot, and
the planet itself eats up more of the sky, blocking both the Sun and the
inner planets—including us.
These images are incredibly gorgeous, but also serve a scientific
purpose. Seeing the planet’s atmosphere and rings this way makes it
easier to see faint details. The way the light scatters in different
colors can also give hints about the atmosphere’s physical
characteristics, as well as the composition and size of the countless
icy particles making up the rings.
And, it just goes to show you: Science is beautiful.
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