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T5HBXG Saturn's moon Enceladus casts a shadow on planet Saturn's rings (3d render, elements of this image are furnished by NASA)
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T5HBY2 Saturn's moon Enceladus casts shadow on planet Saturn's rings (3d render, elements of this image are furnished by NASA)
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T5J655 Saturn's moon Enceladus casts shadow on the rings (3d illustration, elements of this image are furnished by NASA)
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RJAB1N July 19, 2013, the Cassini spacecraft slipped into Saturn's shadow and turned to image the planet, seven of its moons, its inner rings and Earth. With the sun's powerful and potentially damaging rays eclipsed by Saturn itself, Cassini's on-board cameras were able to take advantage of this unique viewing geometry. They acquired a panoramic mosaic of the Saturn system that allows scientists to see details in the rings and throughout the system as they are backlit by the sun.
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2WK8WC4 Dark and sharply defined ring shadows appear to constrict the flow of color from Saturn's warmly hued south to the bluish northern latitudes
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2GE0WHH In the Shadow of Saturn In the shadow of Saturn, unexpected wonders appear. The robotic Cassini spacecraft now orbiting Saturn recently drifted in giant planet's shadow for about 12 hours and looked back toward the eclipsed Sun. Cassini saw a view unlike any other. First, the night side of Saturn is seen to be partly lit by light reflected from its own majestic ring system. Next, the rings themselves appear dark when silhouetted against Saturn, but quite bright when viewed away from Saturn and slightly scattering sunlight, in the above exaggerated color image. Saturn's rings light up so much.
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2DDBETW NO FILM, NO VIDEO, NO TV, NO DOCUMENTARY - The sunlit face of Saturn's rings shows magnificent detail in this image taken in near infrared light, on January 14, 2005. Most notable is the transition in brightness toward the outer edges of the image, due to differences in composition and ring particle density. The image was obtained from Cassini's vantage point beneath the ring plane. The image was taken with the Cassini spacecraft narrow angle camera on December 12, 2004, at a distance of 1.8 million kilometers (1.1 million miles) from Saturn, through a broadband filter sensitive to wavelengths
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2AH300P The color in the image is reconstructed by combining three different pictures, taken in blue, green and red light (4390, 5470 and 7180 angstroms). Because Saturn's north pole is currently tilted toward Earth (24 degrees), the HST image reveals unprecedented detail in atmospheric features at the northern polar hood, a region not extensively imaged by the Voyager space probes. The classic features of Saturn's vast ring system are also clearly seen from outer to irner edge; the bright A and B rings, divided by the Cassini division, and the very faint inner C ring. The Enche division, a dark gap n
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E120KW Aug. 25, 1981 - Voyager 2 returned this high-resolution view of Saturn's rings Aug.23 at a range of 3.3 million kilometers ( 2 million miles). The planet's limb is visible through the C-ring and the inner part of the B-ring. The ring shadows have been obscured by the bright band of light, evident of Saturn's surface, that passed through the more transparent Cassini division. The Cassini division is the darker gap that extends from the lower center of this image to the upper left; it is about 5,000km (3,100ml.) wide. Many bright and dark ringlets are seen throughout the complex ring system
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KGFGJK Saturn's moon Enceladus casts a long shadow on planet Saturn's rings (3d illustration banner, elements of this image are furnished by NASA)
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HRJNDN Saturn, Mosaic image
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HRJN2W Satun's Rings, UVIS Image
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HRJJ4N Saturn's Axial Tilt, 1996 - 2000
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HRJHND Saturn at Equinox
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HRJ6G2 Saturn's Moon Mimas
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G155G4 This false-color image of Saturn's main rings was made by combining data from multiple star occultations using Cassini's ultraviolet imaging spectrograph. An occultation occurs when one celestial body passes in front of another, thus hiding the other from
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DHPRNN NASA's Cassini spacecraft slipped into Saturn's shadow and turned to image the planet, its moons, its rings and, planet, Earth.
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DHPRNF NASA's Cassini spacecraft slipped into Saturn's shadow and turned to image the planet, its moons, its rings and, planet, Earth.
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DHPRMJ NASA's Cassini spacecraft slipped into Saturn's shadow and turned to image the planet, its moons, its rings and, planet, Earth.
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DC8XR0 NASA's Cassini spacecraft image of Saturn's rings and planet Earth and moon
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DBBH68 NASA's Cassini spacecraft image of Saturn's rings and planet Earth and moon
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DBBH67 NASA's Cassini spacecraft image of Saturn's rings and planet Earth and moon
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DB3F3N Photo of planet Earth taken by Cassini
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DAHC06 Saturn's rings photographed by the Cassini spacecraft. Optimised and enhanced version of an original NASA image. Credit NASA
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D9996H Saturn's moon Mimas joins the planet's rings which appear truncated by the planet's shadow in this Cassini spacecraft image.
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D9995F Shadows cast by Saturn's rings darken the southern hemisphere of the planet and give a truncated appearance to the bottom of this Cassini spacecraft image.
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D99953 Rhea's trailing hemisphere shows off its wispy terrain on the left of this image which includes Saturn's rings in the distance. Cassini.
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D99950 Saturn's shadow interrupts the planet's rings, leaving just thin slivers of the rings visible in this image, which shows a pair of the planet's small moons. Cassini.
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D9994X Spokes, those ghostly radial markings on Saturn's B ring, appear bright compared to the rings in this image taken a little more than a month after the planet's August 2009 equinox. Cassini.
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D9994G The shadow of the moon Mimas has just slipped off Saturn's rings and onto the planet in this Cassini spacecraft image.
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Total de Resultados: 30

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