Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Cassini spies 2 new Saturn moons
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-08-17 08:52

NASA's Cassini spacecraft has spied two new little moons around satellite-rich Saturn, the space agency said Monday.


The tiny "worldlet," temporarily dubbed S/2004 S2 (in box) as it makes its way around Saturn.
Saturn's tally of known moons now stands at 33.

The images were taken by Cassini on June 1 from 10 million miles out, as it approached the ringed planet. The spacecraft entered orbit around Saturn on June 30.

The two newly spotted, faint moons are about 2 miles and 21/2 miles across, and 120,000 miles and 131,000 miles respectively from Saturn's center. That's considerably smaller than the moons with 12 mile diameters previously discovered in Saturn's orbit.

They are located between the orbits of moons Mimas and Enceladus, a surprise to scientists who thought such tiny satellites would have been shattered long ago in collisions with comets.

Researchers say they will be on the lookout for even more Saturn moons, and will seek close-ups of the ones just found.

"Hopefully, we haven't seen the last of them," said Carolyn Porco, Cassini's imaging team leader in Boulder, Colorado.



Tidbits of Beijing life
Actor Yu Yi speaks for "Confidence"
The autumn is coming!
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

China grabs 5 more golds, tops the medal tally

 

   
 

Legislators to strengthen democracy

 

   
 

GM to begin making Cadillacs in China

 

   
 

Bush to announce worldwide troop retreat

 

   
 

China, DPRK diplomats meet for nuclear issue

 

   
 

Chinese vendors injured in Thailand shootout

 

   
  Cassini spies 2 new Saturn moons
   
  10-year-old passes CET 4
   
  Man kills 8 with axe
   
  Family chefs cook up dining delights
   
  'Bird nest' sings too costly an Olympic tune
   
  Pondering on celebrity culture
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Feature  
  Author unhappy with actress for lead role  
Advertisement