| March 26, 2008. Streams of high-density gas detected by Cassini’s
Ultraviolet Imaging Spectromer (UVIS) on Saturn’s moon Enceladus
match the locations of dust jets determined from Cassini images,
labeled here with Roman numerals. The spectrograph pinpointed the
locations of individual gas streams in the plume in a ‘stellar
occultation’ which
involves measuring the light of a star, (in this case, zeta Orionis),
as it passed behind the plume from Cassini’s viewpoint.
The blue line in this projection shows the path of the starlight
through the plume,over the south polar region of Enceladus. The
instrument looked at the star across this path in the direction
indicated by the short blue lines.
Some of the dust jets appear to merge together in UVIS stellar
occultation data. The dimming of starlight labeled “a” was
caused by dust jets V and VII. The dimming of starlight marked
as feature “b” is probably off-set too far to be
associated with dust jet I, because the jet is not perfectly
vertical. Dimming of starlight labeled “c” corresponds
to dust jet VI, and “d” is dust jet III, with dust
jet II in between. The individual jets come from sources with
an area of less than 300 by 300 meters (1,000 feet square) – about
the size of half a tennis court -- probably stretched out rectangularly
along the tiger stripes. The new UVIS data indicate that the
water molecules are blasting off from Enceladus at faster than
600 meters per second (about 1,300 miles per hour.
Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Colorado/ |