Cassini spacecraft successfully dipped near the surface of Saturn's  moon Enceladus on Nov. 30. Though Cassini's closest approach took it to  within about 48 kilometers (30 miles) of the moon's northern hemisphere,  the spacecraft also captured shadowy images of the tortured south polar  terrain and the brilliant jets that spray out from it. 
 Many of the raw images feature darkened terrain because winter has  descended upon the southern hemisphere of Enceladus. But sunlight behind  the moon backlights the jets of water vapor and icy particles. In some  images, the jets line up in rows, forming curtains of spray. 
 The new raw images can be seen at http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/photos/raw/ . 
 The Enceladus flyby was the 12th of Cassini's mission, with the  spacecraft swooping down around 61 degrees north latitude.  This  encounter and its twin three weeks later at the same altitude and  latitude, are the closest Cassini will come to the northern hemisphere  surface of Enceladus during the extended Solstice mission. (Cassini's  closest-ever approach to Enceladus occurred in October 2008, when the  spacecraft dipped to an altitude of 25 kilometers, or 16 miles.) 
 Among the observations Cassini made during this Enceladus flyby, the  radio science subsystem collected gravity measurements to understand the  moon's interior structure, and the fields and particles instruments  sampled the charged particle environment around the moon. 
 About two days before the Enceladus flyby, Cassini also passed the  sponge-like moon Hyperion, beaming back intriguing images of the craters  on its surface. The flyby, at 72,000 kilometers (45,000 miles) in  altitude, was one of the closest approaches to Hyperion that Cassini has  made. 
 The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the  European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion  Laboratory manages the project for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in  Washington. The Cassini orbiter was designed, developed and assembled  at JPL. The imaging operations center is based at the Space Science  Institute in Boulder, Colo. 



 
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