The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) recently shared a spectacular image of Saturn and its iconic rings, which are mainly composed of ice particles with a smaller amount of ...
A Hubble near-ultraviolet image, obtained in 2017 during the Saturn summer in the northern hemisphere, is used as a reference to sketch the Lyman-alpha emission of the planet. The rings appear ...
For the last 13 years, it has seen sights on Saturn that no other spacecraft has shown us. Here are some of the best images from Cassini's mission, so far. Video courtesy of NASA. Follow Tech ...
studying its rings, moons, and Saturn itself. The image above, taken by Cassini in August, 2013, is a silhouette with the sun located behind the planet. You get a breathtaking look at the rings ...
If you were to pick Saturn out of a lineup you’d probably recognize it by its iconic rings. They’re the biggest, brightest rings in our solar system. Extending over 280,000 km from the planet ...
Ring "spokes" The discovery of Saturn's ring "spokes" dates back to the 1980s with NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft, followed by detailed observations by the Cassini mission in the late 2000s.
I WRITE to call the attention of observers to the present appearance of the inner dusky ring of Saturn. Although the ring is not very open, only permitting that portion near the ends to be seen on ...
This illustration shows NASA's Cassini spacecraft in orbit around Saturn. Cassini made 22 orbits that swooped between the rings and the planet before ending its mission. This image from NASA's ...
A huge storm dominates the rather featureless surface of Saturn in an image taken by the Cassini ... The dark stripes are the shadows of Saturn's rings.
Montage of JWST MIRI/MRS observations of Saturn in November 2022, requiring four tiles to study ... [+] Saturn’s northern hemisphere and rings ... In the main image, above, the blue region ...
If you were to pick Saturn out of a lineup you'd probably recognize it by its iconic rings. They're the biggest, brightest rings in our solar system. Extending over 280,000 km from the planet ...
While Saturn won't lose its rings, they will go edge-on, making them essentially invisible to observers on Earth. NASA's Amy Simon notes that the rings will only be faintly visible in the months ...