A Glimpse Back

Previous

11/13/80 1.5 million km (930,000 mi)

Looking back at the Saturn system as it soared upward and outward, Voyager 1 continued its observations for nearly five weeks after closest Saturn approach. The spacecraft photographed the planet’s sunlit crescent, the ring shadows falling on the planet, and Saturn’s dark hemisphere illuminated by “ringshine.” It searched for lightning and auroras on the planet’s dark side and looked for “sun dogs” resulting from ammonia crystals in the atmosphere. It continued temperature and composition measurements and searched for new satellites out to the orbit of Mimas. It measured the flow of plasma in Saturn’s magnetosphere and now, its journey far from over, Voyager 1 proceeds toward the outer boundary of our solar system, as it seeks to probe the space among the stars of our galaxy, the Milky Way.

11/16/80 5.3 million km (3.3 million mi)

Departing Saturn, Voyager 1 photographed the planet from a unique perspective, clearly showing Saturn’s shadow on the rings.

11/12/80 250,000 km (150,000 mi)

During a 40-minute period on the day of encounter, the spacecraft was itself in the planet’s shadow. At this time, the wide-angle camera acquired a photograph of this shadow line, revealing ring material in a region very close to the planet, where no material had been previously observed. This inner ring, the D-Ring, is roughly 6000 kilometers (4000 miles) wide and extends to within about 6000 kilometers of Saturn’s cloudtops.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Clyx.com


Top of Page
Top of Page