The new Saturn dive video captures about an hour of Cassini observations on April 26, starting near the planet's north polar vortex, and the bizarre hexagonal jet stream that surrounds it, and heading south from there.
"I was surprised to see so many sharp edges along the hexagon's outer boundary and the eye-wall of the polar vortex," Cassini imaging team associate Kunio Sayanagi, who's based at Hampton University in Virginia, said in a statement.
"Something must be keeping different latitudes from mixing to maintain those edges," added Sayanagi, who helped produce the new video.
The view shifts over the course of the dive video in several different ways. For example, Cassini gets closer to Saturn's cloud tops, dropping in altitude from 45,000 miles to 4,200 miles (72,400 to 6,700 kilometers). As a result, image resolution changes from 5.4 miles (8.7 km) per pixel to 0.5 mile (0.8 km) per pixel, NASA officials said.
That shield didn't end up taking very many hits; Cassini's first dive revealed that the narrow gap between Saturn and its innermost rings is surprisingly empty.
The $3.2 billion Cassini-Huygens mission — a joint effort of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency — launched in October 1997 and reached the Saturn system in July 2004. (Huygens was a lander that the Cassini mothership helped deliver to the surface of the ringed planet's largest moon, Titan, in January 2005.)
The Cassini orbiter is almost out of fuel, so mission controllers are leading the probe through its last few months of life. This Grand Finale phase consists of 22 daring dives through the Saturn rings' gap, with each one coming about 6.5 days after the last.
The first plunge occurred on April 26 and the second on Tuesday night (May 2). The third one will take place in the early morning hours of May 9 EDT.
There is still a lot more to be learned from these additional dives, mission team members said.
Read more at Discovery News
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