This clear-filter image was taken using the Cassini spacecraft narrow-angle camera on Oct. 11, 2005, during Cassini's close targeted flyby of Dione. The image was acquired from a distance of 4,486 kilometres from Dione and at a Sun-Dione-spacecraft, or phase, angle of 10 degrees. The image scale is 23 meters per pixel.
Expand (155kb, 1020 x 1020) Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
The terrain in this image is located within a 60-kilometer-wide impact crater along the feature called Padua Linea. The western rim of the encompassing crater runs from the middle left to the upper right. The crater's central peak can be seen at the lower right. Multiple generations of fractures are visible here. Numerous fine, roughly parallel linear grooves run across the terrain from top to bottom and are interrupted by the larger, irregular bright fractures. In several places, fractures postdate some deposits in the bottoms of craters that are not badly degraded by time. Such a fracture, for example, runs from the centre toward the upper right. Most of the craters seen here have bright walls and dark deposits of material on their floors. As on other Saturnian moons, rockslides on Dione may reveal cleaner ice, while the darker materials accumulate in areas of lower topography and lower slope (e.g. crater floors and the bases of scarps). This view is centred on terrain near 11 degrees south latitude, 238 degrees west longitude.
This image was taken on October 11, 2005. The camera was pointing toward Dione at approximately 38,352 kilometres away, and the image was taken using the CL1 and IR1 filters.
Credit nasa The Cassini spacecraft captured Dione eclipsing Saturn's moon Rhea. In the animation, the distance between Dione and Rhea was roughly 330,000 kilometres. Cassini will make a flyby of Rhea on Nov. 26. Raw images of Dione's cratered surface are now available.
This image was taken on October 11, 2005. Dione was approximately 704,217 kilometres away. The image was taken using the CL1 and CL2 filters. Rhea is in the background.