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Rev 53 Observations including Epimetheus
jasedm
post Nov 22 2007, 12:02 PM
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Close encounter of the third (of December) kind approaching fast. There seems to have been little anticipation so far for this flyby of Epimetheus (compared to say Hyperion or Phoebe), although at ~9000km, it will be the closest 'rock' flyby in the whole of the prime mission.

I understand that approach is from the nightside, phase angle is very high at C/A (139 degrees) and spacecraft speed is ~22km/second - these all presumably hamper the usual suite of investigations. Having said that, does anybody here have any detail regarding ISS observations an hour or so either side of C/A?

Jase
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volcanopele
post Nov 22 2007, 06:45 PM
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Actually, there was an accidental flyby of Polydeuces in February 2005 that was closer.

More info on the Epimetheus encounter will be available next week.


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volcanopele
post Nov 27 2007, 11:03 PM
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The Looking Ahead article for Rev53 has just been posted:

http://ciclops.org/view.php?id=4020

There are no Epimetheus observations (at least by ISS) until shortly after C/A when Epimetheus is 36,000 km from that satellite. ISS will then commence imaging Epimetheus using nearly its full compliment of filters until Cassini is 43,000 km from the moon.


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jasedm
post Nov 28 2007, 09:19 PM
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Thanks VP. I suppose the risk of sun damage to the optics prevented a NAC snap of the tiny sliver of crescent at C/A - would have been great to see that lumpy terminator at 70m/pixel though....
It will be very interesting to compare the terrains of Janus and Epimetheus at ranges of less than 40,000km (next year for Janus)- theories of shared histories abound, and they have very similar albedos and of course almost identical orbits.
Cassini images thus far make their terrains appear quite distinct due to the different lighting conditions when images were shuttered, but unfortunately there don't appear to be any opportunities for mid-range observations of Epimetheus at sub-50 degree phase angles (even allowing for the XM).
This is a shame, beause I can't rid myself of the feeling that Janus (and thus maybe Epimetheus) has relatively dark lag deposits at the bottom of some craters..... smile.gif
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Ian R
post Dec 4 2007, 04:24 PM
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A very rough and ready colour composite:

Attached Image


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Ian R
post Dec 4 2007, 05:04 PM
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A stacked and cleaned-up version:

Attached Image


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Phil Stooke
post Dec 4 2007, 05:10 PM
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And my version of the above, processed to show detail near the terminator. Looks like this is the south polar region in the middle, and only outside the broad southern facet do we see the territory previously imaged by Voyager. Earlier Cassini close-ups were of the area past this limb at upper right.

Phil

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ngunn
post Dec 4 2007, 05:13 PM
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Very nice. Are we seeing 3 distinct shades of grey in that prominent crater, or is one of those shade boundaries just a change in slope? Do we have suitable data for an anaglyph?
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ugordan
post Dec 4 2007, 05:43 PM
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R+B color and greatly enhanced:
Attached Image



IR1+GRN+UV3 greatly saturated:
Attached Image


All in all, another one of those really gray rocks.


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tedstryk
post Dec 4 2007, 06:02 PM
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The grooves of Phobos and the dust of Deimos. I could have mistaken it for either Martian moon (and yes, I know is much larger, but there is still the resemblance). Wow!


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MarcF
post Dec 4 2007, 08:33 PM
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Really Nice !!
Is it an illusion or is this hemisphere covered by a giant impact scare like the one found on Hyperion (upper right 2/3) ?
If it is really a crater, it confirms that like Hyperion, or asteroid Mathilde, Epimetheus has a rubble-pile structure.
Marc.
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volcanopele
post Dec 4 2007, 08:52 PM
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Very cool stuff. The depression with a central peak (crater or not) was best seen previously in May 2005: http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA07531 . Epimetheus' geology certainly shares some similarities to Hyperion. However, unlike moons like Telesto, Epimetheus seems to be only partially dust covered. Might be interesting to see what VIMS can pull out of their data.


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Phil Stooke
post Dec 4 2007, 08:52 PM
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No, it's not an illusion, this is a big crater.

Here is a mosaic of Voyager images of Epimetheus, projected onto a sphere and viewed from the south pole (azimuthal equidistant projection):

Attached Image


It shows the crater as a shadowed area (it was over the limb in Voyager views, not really full of shadow). Rotate clockwise 120 degrees to fit the new image.

Phil


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MarcF
post Dec 4 2007, 09:43 PM
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OK, thanks a lot Jason and Phil. Following your Voyager mosaic Phil, the big crater on left of the new Cassini image corresponds to Pollux.
I'm impatient to see a new map of Epimetheus. With the three "relative-close" flybys performed by Cassini, the coverage of the moon's surface must not be too bad.
Marc.
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Exploitcorporati...
post Dec 4 2007, 09:52 PM
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Here's another handy misshapen-lump-'o-ice key, out of scale and with north crudely to the right. Is there an object in this system (excluding Enceladus and Titan) without a grotesquely disproportionate impact structure?

Attached Image


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