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Titan Flyby - Jan. 5, 2008

Titan Flyby - Jan. 5, 2008

Jan. 05, 2008


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Titan
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space The glow of Titan's extensive atmosphere shines in false colors in this view of Saturn's gas-enshrouded moon acquired by the Cassini spacecraft visual and infrared mapping spectrometer during a July 2, 2004, flyby. This image is a combination of near-infrared colors, each of which probes different phenomena in the moon.
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Cassini Completes First Titan Visit of the New Year

The Cassini spacecraft successfully flew by Titan on Jan. 5. Its visual and infrared mapping spectrometer mapped the Huygens probe's landing site, now in direct sunlight. The flyby featured two separate stellar occultations to study the structure of Titan's atmosphere. The spectrometer watched the star Alpha Bootes, and the ultraviolet imaging spectrograph pointed toward Alpha Lyra.

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Titan at a Glance
Titan Flyby
Jan. 5, 2008 (SCET)

Altitude

1010 km (628 miles)

Speed
6.3 km/sec (14,000 mph)

Details
+ Mission Description PDF ( 1.0 MB)

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+ Browse or Search the latest Raw Images

+ Saturn's Moons


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