Friday, January 15, 2010

Tethys Slips Behind Titan

Saturn's moon Tethys with its prominent Odysseus Crater silently slips behind Saturn's largest moon Titan and then emerges on the other side.Tethys is not actually enshrouded in Titan's atmosphere. Tethys (1062 kilometers, 660 miles across) is more than twice as far from Cassini than Titan (5150 kilometers, 3200 miles across) is in this sequence. Tethys is 2.2 million kilometers (1.4 million

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