Jump to content
Main Page
General Information Exhibits Education IMAX Fun Lab
Creative World Gallery
World of Life Gallery
Air and Space GalleryAir and Space Gallery
Air and Aircraft
Humans in Space
Mission to the PlanetsMission to the Planets
Cassini-HuygensCassini-Huygens
Explorer 1
Orion Sounding Rocket
Pioneer Venus
SAGE 1
Sputnik
Stars and Telescopes
Discovery room
Weingart Special Exhibit Gallery
Disney Science Court & Taper Sky Court
Science Plaza
Exhibits for rent
Copywrite 2001-2004, California Science Center
 

Weekly Cassini Update
by Dr. Kenneth Phillips
May 13, 2005

Dr. Ken Phillips, Curator of Aerospace Programs at the Science Center, releases biweekly updates on the progress of the Cassini mission. Check here for a summary of the latest findings.

Quick links: Image of the week; Cassini fun facts; question of the week; history and tidbits; and Astrokim guide to the night skies.

Image of the week archive
Date taken:
January 24 – 26, 2005

Distance from Saturn:
1.3 billion kilometers
(800 million miles)

This set of images (taken over three consecutive days) makes for some fun detective work and provides another great example of how scientists fuse together data from different sources to develop a greater understanding of cause and effect. For two reasons, the images have an odd quality about them. First, they combine ultraviolet (shown as white wisps surrounding Saturn’s south pole) with visible wavelength images of Saturn and its rings. The wisps show auroras that result when charged particles interact with the planet’s magnetic field. Just like the aurora borealis (or northern lights) that we occasionally see here on Earth, Saturn produces spectacular auroras in its south polar region when the solar wind slams into the magnetic field that surrounds the giant planet.

Secondly, the date and resolution of the images hint at something unusual. Note the date on which they were taken. Cassini had already been placed into orbit around Saturn where it continues to deliver much more detailed images of the rings and atmosphere. Instead, these images show a distant Saturn with little definition of the rings other than the familiar Cassini division. The reason? The distant images were actually taken by the Hubble Space Telescope which remains in a low Earth orbit.

Look closely and you’ll notice that the aurora brightened after the first day. Combining the Hubble imagery with data collected by Cassini let scientists measure the solar wind approaching Saturn and the radio emissions given off from the planet. Using the Hubble imagery with the Cassini measurements, they confirmed that the strong brightening of the aurora on January 26th corresponded with the recent arrival of a large disturbance in the solar wind.

For more details about the mission, please visit the NASA website.

Cassini fun facts archive
Cassini has several instruments that help scientists understand the magnetic fields, charged particles and radiation emitted from Saturn. Unlike clouds, rings and moons, these attributes of Saturn are invisible to the human senses and must be measured directly.

The Cassini Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS) measures the energy and electrical charge of particles such as electrons and protons that the instrument encounters as well as the solar wind within Saturn's magnetosphere.
     
The Magnetospheric Imaging Instrument (MIMI) also produces images and other data about the particles trapped in Saturn's magnetic field including radiation emitted by the planet.
     
The Radio and Plasma Wave Science instrument (RPWS) measures the radio signals coming from Saturn, including the radio waves given off by the interaction of the solar wind with Saturn and Titan.
     
For more information on the Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn, see the NASA website.

Question of the week archive
To help us learn more about what interests visitors to the California Science Center, we invite you to submit a question regarding the Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn or the full-scale model of the spacecraft that is on display in the Air and Space Gallery. We will select one question for each weekly update.

Saturn tonight—the Astrokim report by Kim Burtnyk
Saturn is back! If you can find that most recognizable of constellations Orion, then you can find Saturn. Click for a star chart to help you locate the planet.
If you know the constellation Gemini, find Saturn by following an imaginary line from Castor to Pollux, then the next star below Pollux is Saturn.

If you're interested in stargazing, the Santa Clarita Valley (a.k.a. “The Local Group”) hosts star parties that are open to the public. Visit the Local Group’s website for more information.

General InformationExhibitsEducationIMAXFun Lab