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New Cassini eye candy: the changing seasons of Saturn

Xeni Jardin at 9:41 am Thu, Aug 30, 2012

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Carolyn Porco, Cassini Imaging Team Leader and director of CICLOPS in Boulder, CO, writes:

For no other reason than that they are gorgeous, the Cassini imaging team is releasing today a set of fabulous images of Saturn and Titan...in living color...for your day-dreaming enjoyment. Note that our presence at Saturn for the last 8 years has made possible the sighting of subtle changes with time, and one such change is obvious here. As the seasons have advanced, and spring has come to the north and autumn to the south throughout the Saturn system, the azure blue in the northern winter Saturnian hemisphere that greeted Cassini upon its arrival in 2004 is now fading; and it is now the southern hemisphere, in its approach to winter, that is taking on a bluish hue.

[B]ack here on Earth, the Cassini mission was recently given rave reviews by a panel of planetary scientists and NASA program managers for its contributions to our understanding of the solar system, a circumstance that bodes well for a well-funded continuing mission over the next 5 years. Despite the fact that we can't know exactly what the next five years will bring us, we can be certain that whatever it is will be wondrous.

Photo above: "A giant of a moon appears before a giant of a planet undergoing seasonal changes in this natural color view of Titan and Saturn from NASA's Cassini spacecraft."

More beautiful images from Cassini here.

Hellooooo, new desktop.

Boing Boing editor/partner and tech culture journalist Xeni Jardin hosts and produces Boing Boing's in-flight TV channel on Virgin America airlines (#10 on the dial), and writes about living with breast cancer. Diagnosed in 2011. @xeni on Twitter. email: xeni@boingboing.net.

MORE:  astronomy • cassini • ciclops • exploration • photography • Saturn • Space • space flight • spaceflight

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  • atteSmythe

    Natural color, amazing. I wonder how much energy is blocked from reaching the ‘surface’ of the planet by the rings, and what that does to the weather. If earth had rings, what would the day look like as you passed under their shadow?

  • Jorpho

    If you flip it 180 degrees, it looks like it is wearing a jaunty hat.

    Either that, or it becomes the Internet Explorer icon.

  • BombBlastLightingWaltz

    Q. What did Saturn say to Jupiter?

    A. I can see Uranus. 

  • MTBooks

    When looking at the polar vortex image I had to check to make sure it was Titan and I wasn’t oogling Uranus.
    http://www.ciclops.org/view/7258/Polar_Vortex_in_Color