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Cassini Hunting Enceladus 'Tigers' With Night Vision

On Aug. 13, 2010, NASA's Cassini spacecraft will be flying by Saturn's moon Enceladus, shown here spewing water ice from its south polar region. Image credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
by Staff Writers
Pasadena CA (JPL) Aug 13, 2010
NASA's Cassini spacecraft will be hunting for heat signatures at the "tiger stripes" in the dim south polar region of Saturn's moon Enceladus on Friday, Aug. 13. The closest approach will bring the spacecraft to within about 2,500 kilometers (1,600 miles) of the surface of Enceladus.

The tiger stripes - which are actually giant fissures that spew jets of water vapor and organic particles hundreds of kilometers, or miles, out into space - are hard to see in the visible-light spectrum because winter is beginning to darken the moon's southern hemisphere.

Cassini, however, has its own version of "night vision goggles" - the composite infrared spectrometer instrument - which can track heat even when visible light is low.

The instrument will map temperatures in the transverse fractures between the tiger stripes Cairo Sulcus and Alexandria Sulcus. It will also scan part of the tiger stripe Damascus Sulcus.

The relatively high flyby allows the composite infrared spectrometer to track the tiger stripe surface smoothly throughout the flyby. That kind of coverage is more difficult at lower altitudes because the surface whooshes by very quickly.

In addition, the visual and infrared mapping spectrometer will collect data on the composition of Enceladus, and the imaging cameras will take pictures.



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