Details for this revolution are available http://www.ciclops.org/view/8268/Rev227
This is the orbit I've been looking forward to for some time as it affords us a closer glimpse at Atlas, Prometheus and Epimetheus.
In fact, Cassini approaches the latter two at a closer range than it will for the remainder of the mission, and observations are planned for both, as well as Atlas.
This, despite having to turn the spacecraft and use the high-gain antenna as a shield during ring-plane crossing to avoid any possible collisions with debris in the ring-plane.
This must have been an extra-specially complicated sequence of observations to plan, as it all happens at or around periapse.
I'm really looking forward to another view of Atlas particularly - can't wait!!!
Jase
Here's an RGB composite of astrometric observations of Mimas, Enceladus, and Tethys from December 3.
https://flic.kr/p/BUs8tQ
https://flic.kr/p/BUs8tQ by https://www.flickr.com/photos/132160802@N06/, on Flickr
Flying saucer ?
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/raw/casJPGFullS92/N00251477.jpg
Is it just the play of light and shadow, or really Atlas is extremely flat ?
Very nice Justin, thanks for that!
Cassini-Huygens has to be in the top five UMSF missions ever in terms of scientific return, ingenuity, and sheer beauty.
Feel so privileged to have this ringside seat - sat on my backside at home, not having contributed anything meaningful to this mission yet able to access in almost real-time these stunning images from half-way across the solar-system.
Fantastic!
Jase
Gosh, and I thought that Methone was bizarre. Even though it should not be a surprise that orbiting in such a dusty environment blankets a satellite in dust, but to such an extent and depth...
Two gif's of the mutual events of Mimas and Enceladus on December 3.
A sequence of images from Cassini's close view of Epimetheus.
Surface flickering due to differences in filters for each frame. Noise and cosmic ray hits painted out.
Medium version: https://astro0.files.wordpress.com/2015/12/sequence21.gif | Largest version: https://astro0.files.wordpress.com/2015/12/sequence.gif
My (small) moons' collection!
https://flic.kr/p/BNEP6U
https://flic.kr/p/B1Ronv
https://flic.kr/p/BNEN3b
https://flic.kr/p/B1KDhy
Very nice renderings everyone!
Incidentally, it looks as though the pointing for the Atlas sequence was fractionally off as it falls right on the edge of the FoV in the images.
Understandable though as its orbit is somewhat unpredictable. From Wikipedia:
"Atlas is significantly perturbed by Prometheus and to a lesser degree by Pandora, leading to excursions in longitude of up to 600 km (~0.25°) away from the precessing Keplerian orbit with a rough period of about 3 years. Since the orbits of Prometheus and Pandora are chaotic, it is suspected that Atlas's may be as well.[1]"
Doubtless Aegaeon's imaging sequence on the next orbit has been designed to take account of that moon's orbital uncertainty. Add to that it's a very close, fairly fast flyby, of a moon that has a low albedo, and is tiny even compared to Atlas...
This shows the wisdom of the dozens (hundreds?) of astrometric observations of the small moons the Cassini team has written into the sequences on almost every revolution in recent years, refining their orbits to the finest degree possible.
A contrast stretch shows even more grooves on Epimetheus than show up at first glance.
Phil
I've added artificial color to the WAC clear-filtered frame of Epimetheus, approximating the view a human might have from the same vantage point.
Has anybody else tried their hand at the Atlas images? Here are my quick-and-dirty versions, but I know others can do better.
Eli's had a crack at Atlas already, Emily:
http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?showtopic=8124&view=findpost&p=228437
This is my attempt at the Prometheus obs with a semi-automated method of removing the digital smuts:
Three-frame, clear-filtered stack of Atlas, enlarged by 250%. North is up.
Up late working on that one Ian!
Very nice.
Thanks Jase! Yeah, I work best after the Moon rises it seems ....
Looking at the PDS data for this medium-range flyby of Atlas, I realized a number of frames at the start of the sequence were taken against the backdrop of Saturn's night-side. Thanks to the faint illumination of the cloud decks with ring-shine, an extreme contrast stretch of the images reveals the moon's equatorial bulge and southern hemisphere in profile.
Great catch!
Nice work!
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