BOULDER, Colo., July 19 (UPI) -- The Cassini spacecraft has coasted to its closest encounter yet with Saturn's icy moon Enceladus -- but the pictures it took mystify NASA scientists.
The spacecraft skimmed about 110 miles above the moon July 14, returning pictures of a boulder-strewn landscape currently beyond explanation. The "boulders" appear to range between 30 and 60 feet in diameter.
"That's a surface texture I have never seen anywhere else in the solar system," said David Rothery, a planetary geologist at England's Open University.
John Spencer, a Cassini team member at the Southwest Research Institute in Colorado, agrees the images are puzzling.
"You would expect to see small craters or a smooth, snow-covered landscape at this resolution," he told New Scientist magazine. "This is just strange. In fact, I have a really hard time understanding what I'm seeing." (Elephants without tusks!)
Regardless of the outcome of ongoing analyses and discussions, National Aeronautics and Space Administration officials have already scheduled another flyby of the moon in 2008, when Cassini will skim to within about 60 miles of the moon's boulder-strewn surface.
The spacecraft skimmed about 110 miles above the moon July 14, returning pictures of a boulder-strewn landscape currently beyond explanation. The "boulders" appear to range between 30 and 60 feet in diameter.
"That's a surface texture I have never seen anywhere else in the solar system," said David Rothery, a planetary geologist at England's Open University.
John Spencer, a Cassini team member at the Southwest Research Institute in Colorado, agrees the images are puzzling.
"You would expect to see small craters or a smooth, snow-covered landscape at this resolution," he told New Scientist magazine. "This is just strange. In fact, I have a really hard time understanding what I'm seeing." (Elephants without tusks!)
Regardless of the outcome of ongoing analyses and discussions, National Aeronautics and Space Administration officials have already scheduled another flyby of the moon in 2008, when Cassini will skim to within about 60 miles of the moon's boulder-strewn surface.