Cassini View of Dione

Since it entered Saturnian orbit on July 1st, 2004, the Cassini spacecraft has changed our view of Saturn and its moons.  It is a dynamic gas giant with unique and fascinating moons that have their own characteristics that make them seem more like small, rocky, planets than moons of a gas giant.  Cassini has been delivering amazing science for over a decade, and it’s next journey lies in a polar orbit of Saturn, where it will dive through Saturn’s rings, giving the most detailed and close up views of the tiny ice particles that compose them.  Before this journey, Cassini...

Dawn Mosaic of Ceres Shows a Dark Cratered World

The Dawn space craft has finally begun its science phase after settling into a 13,500 Km orbit around the dark dwarf planet Ceres.  It took some manoeuvring to get it in the right spot, but now it has begun mapping the surface as it slowly orbits once every two weeks.  A lovely mosaic image from the space craft is the latest jaw-dropping picture of the former asteroid. Like a great shot of the Lunar terminator, by seeing the shadows created by the light from the Sun, we can get a sense of depth of the heavy craters on the surface....

Mars is Thirsty: It lost an Ocean of Water

Mars has water.  This statement was in question 15 years ago, but now it’s an accepted idea backed up by proof obtained by the last three Mars rovers.  Not only does Mars have water now, but it had significantly more water in the past, as evidenced by the geological features seen throughout the planet.  Ancient lake and river beds, water erosion, sedimentary rocks, all things that highlight once wet areas. How much water did Mars have? Where did it all go? A team of astronomers from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland has been searching for answers, by looking...