29 August 2017

History for the day: 2017: Cassini leaves the solar system

Gizmodo has a video of Saturn that'll (according to them, anyway) make you cry:

On 15 September 2017, Cassini’s twenty-year-long exploration of the Saturnian system will finally, regrettably, come to an end. But, even in its final act, the spacecraft has been sending back some of the most detailed images it’s ever taken. In one of its recent dives into the gap between Saturn and its rings, the spacecraft took a sequence of photos that offer an striking and unusual view of Saturn’s main rings, and now it’s a mini-movie.
According to NASA, Cassini took twenty-one photos within a span of just four minutes on 20 August 2017. Due to the vantage point of the wide-angle camera, it’s a bit tough to make out each of the big rings, but the most dedicated among us can see the ghostly C ring and brilliant B ring. An especially astute viewer will also notice the Cassini Division, or the three thousand mile gap between Saturn’s A and B rings. (Here is a detailed walk-through that explores the location of each ring and their individual properties.) And no, you may not name your band Cassini Division, because that’s what I’m calling my space-goth Joy Division cover band.
It’s hard to look at the movie, or any of Cassini’s hauntingly beautiful images, and not think of something appropriately morose for its Grand Finale. I personally recommend syncing this video with the Tears in the Rain monologue from Blade Runner:
Hopefully, these last few weeks of Cassini’s life will be its most memorable, but we’ll be sad to see it go.
Rico says he, of course, did not weep, (not even at Roy Batty's death) but it sure is pretty...

No comments:

 

Casino Deposit Bonus