Follow this link to skip to the main content
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
+ View the NASA Portal
Go!
JPL Home JPL Home Page - Earth JPL Home Page - Solar System JPL Home Page - Stars and Galaxies JPL Home Page - Technology
Cassini-Huygens: Mission to Saturn and Titan Cassini-Huygens: Mission to Saturn and Titan
California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Labaoratory NASA
For News Media
For Planetariums & More
For Educators
For Kids
Home
Overview
Multimedia
Cassini at Saturn
Mission
Spacecraft
Science
NEWS - Features - Tethys and Titan Flyby - Jun. 27 and 29, 2007

space
Titan
space
space Sunlight scatters through Titan's atmosphere, illuminating high hazes and bathing the entire moon in a soft glow. Image taken May 12, 2007.
+ Image Details
+ More Titan Information
Cassini Completes Tethys and Titan Flybys

This week, Cassini successfully completed flybys of Saturn's moons Tethys (June 27) and Titan (June 29).

On June 27, Cassini got a close-up look at Tethys' Ithaca Chasma, a canyon that is four times as long as Earth's Grand Canyon. Scientists are studying how this canyon formed and whether Tethys was active in the past. Two days later, on June 29, Cassini flew by Titan. The goal was to map Titan's shape in order to seek clues for the presence of a subsurface ocean, and to probe the atmosphere.

+ Browse or search the latest Raw Images

space
space
Tethys and Titan at a Glance
Tethys Flyby
Jun. 27, 2007 (SCET)

Altitude
18,945 km (11,772 miles)

Titan Flyby
Jun. 29, 2007

Distance
1932 km (1200 miles)

Speed
6.2 km/sec (13,870 mph)

Details
+ Mission Description PDF (1.24 MB)

+ Tethys Image Gallery

+ Titan Image Gallery

+ Saturn's Moons




Privacy Statement Glossary Sitemap FAQ
FirstGov NASA
Outreach Manager: Alice Wessen
Editor: Kirk Munsell
Science Writer: Enrico Piazza
Webmaster: Allan Yu.
Last Updated: 07.03.2007
JPL Clearance: CL02-2452
+ Contact Us