NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day: Saturn's Rings from the Other Side
What do Saturn's rings look like from the other side? From Earth, we usually see Saturn's rings from the same side of the ring plane that the Sun illuminates them.
Geometrically, in the below picture taken in April by the robot Cassini spacecraft now orbiting Saturn, the Sun is behind the camera but on the other side of the ring plane.
Saturn's Rings from the Other Side: Photo Credit: Cassini Imaging Team, SSI, JPL, ESA, NASA
This vantage point, specifically 17 degrees above the ring plane, gives a breathtaking views of the most splendid ring system in the Solar System. Strangely, the rings have similarities to a photographic negative of a front view.
The ring brightness as recorded from different angles indicates ring thickness and particle density of ring particles. Elsewhere, ring shadows can be seen on the sunlit face of Saturn, shown sporting numerous cloud structures in nearly true color.
Source: NASA
Scroll down for related articles:
Related articles
- 2008-06-10: NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day: Saturn's Rings from the Other Side
- 2008-04-16: NASA Extends Cassini's Grand Tour of Saturn
- 2008-03-31: NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day: Close Up of Enceladus' Tiger Stripes
- 2007-08-21: Pioneering NASA Spacecraft Mark Thirty Years of Flight
- 2007-08-06: NASA: Cassini Finds Possible Origin of One of Saturn's Rings
- 2009-11-04: NASA MESSENGER Spacecraft Reveals More Hidden Territory on Mercury
- 2009-11-04: NASA and X Prize Announce Winners of Lunar Lander Challenge
- 2009-10-30: NASA Gives Go for Space Shuttle Atlantis Launch on Nov. 16
- 2009-10-28: NASA Awards Space Radiobiology Research Grants
- 2009-10-20: NASA Updates Shuttle Atlantis Target Launch Date, Crew Rehearsal
- 2009-10-19: NASA Reschedules Rollout Of Ares I-X
- 2009-10-16: NASA Spacecraft Provides First View of Our Place in the Galaxy