Fil:Enceladus PIA06191.jpg

Page contents not supported in other languages.
Fra Wikipedia, den frie encyklopædi

Fuld opløsning(3.750 × 2.876 billedpunkter, filstørrelse: 1,05 MB, MIME-type: image/jpeg)


Denne fil er fra Wikimedia Commons

Beskrivelse

Beskrivelse
English: This spectacular view is a mosaic of four high resolution images taken by the Cassini spacecraft narrow angle camera on Feb. 16, 2005, during its close flyby of Saturn's moon Enceladus.

The view is about 300 kilometers (200 miles) across and shows the myriad of faults, fractures, folds, troughs and craters that make this Saturnian satellite especially intriguing to planetary scientists. More than 20 years ago, NASA's Voyager spacecraft gave hints of a surface cut by tectonic features, and subsequent images of other icy moons have revealed many different ways that stresses have acted on icy moon crusts.

The new close-up images of Enceladus, which has a diameter of 505 kilometers (314 miles), show some familiar-looking features and others that are brand new. The work required to unravel their origins, their formation sequence, and the implications for the evolution of icy solar system bodies is just beginning.

Voyager images of Enceladus, which were obtained at much poorer spatial resolution, showed terrains like those seen here. They were called "smooth plains" because they appeared to exhibit little topographic relief. However, Cassini has now viewed these terrains at almost 10 times better resolution. The new images reveal very complex systems of fractures, resurfaced terrain, and in some cases, topographic relief greater than several hundred meters.

Many styles of fracturing are evident in this mosaic. Extending downward from the top center of the mosaic for hundreds of kilometers is a broad belt of complex, interwoven fractures. A huge rift 5 kilometers (3 miles)-wide dissects this belt and extends into several older-looking, distinct regions or "cells" of terrain that themselves exhibit distinct fracture patterns.

Because Cassini flew rapidly past Enceladus, the right-side images were taken from a slightly different perspective than the left, and are delineated by the white box.

The mosaic covers longitudes from about 254 west to 296 west and latitudes from 60 south to the equator.

The images were taken in visible light on Feb. 17, 2005, at distances ranging from of 26,140 to 17,434 kilometers (16,243 to 10,833 miles) from Enceladus and at Sun-Enceladus-spacecraft, or phase, angles ranging from 27 to 29 degrees. Pixel scale in the left-side image is 150 meters (492 feet) per pixel; in the right-side (white box) image, scale is 105 meters (344 feet) per pixel. The image has been contrast-enhanced to aid visibility.
Dato
Kilde http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA06191
Forfatter NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
Dette billede eller video er katalogiseret af Johnson Space Center under National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) ved foto ID: PIA06191.

Denne tag indeholder og/eller påviser ingen ophavsretslige informationer eller kildeinformationer af dette medie. Rettigheder skal stadigvæk oplyses. Se Commons:Licensing for flere informationer.
Andre sprog:

Licensering

Public domain Denne fil er i offentligt domæne i USA fordi den udelukkende er skabt af NASA. NASAs ophavsretspolitik erklærer at materiale udgivet af NASA ikke er omfattet af ophavsret medmindre andet er nævnt. (Se også Template:PD-USGov, NASAs ophavsretspolitik eller JPLs politik for brug af billeder.)
Advarsler:

Captions

Tilføj en kort forklaring på en enkelt linje om hvad filen viser

Elementer som er med i denne fil

afbilder

Filhistorik

Klik på en dato/tid for at se filen som den så ud på det tidspunkt.

Dato/tidMiniaturebilledeDimensionerBrugerKommentar
nuværende2. apr. 2016, 00:54Miniature af versionen fra 2. apr. 2016, 00:543.750 × 2.876 (1,05 MB)Banjobetter res
20. feb. 2005, 17:50Miniature af versionen fra 20. feb. 2005, 17:502.340 × 1.580 (623 KB)BricktopEnceladus image from NASA

Den følgende side bruger denne fil:

Global filanvendelse

Følgende andre wikier anvender denne fil: