MagPortal.com   Clustify - document clustering
 Home  |  Newsletter  |  My Articles  |  My Account  |  Help 
Similar Articles
Geotimes
December 2004
A Saturnian One-Two Punch: Flybys of Titan and Dione On Monday, the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft flew by Titan only 1,200 kilometers above the moon's surface. It was the second such flyby of Titan, Saturn's largest moon, since the spacecraft began orbiting Saturn on June 30. mark for My Articles similar articles
Scientific American
April 2005
Mark Alpert
Strange New World Piercing the haze, Huygens gets a view of Titan's surface. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
February 2005
Touching Titan Little more than an hour after landing, the Huygens probe sent back its first shots of Saturn's largest moon. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
July 2004
Jay Chapman
Sliding into Saturn Late Wednesday night, the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft silently slipped through the outermost rings of Saturn and entered into orbit. By early Thursday morning, Cassini began transmitting strikingly elegant close-up images of Saturn's rings. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
July 2006
Kathryn Hansen
Dunes on Titan Sand dunes discovered on Saturn's moon Titan are structurally similar to dunes in Earth's Namib desert in southern Africa. The dunes' various orientations are helping astronomers map Titan's wind patterns. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
May 2005
Laura Stafford
Saturn's New Moon In a small space between Saturn's rings, scientists discovered a previously unknown moon, currently known as S/2005 S1, from the images sent back to Earth from Cassini less than a year after the spacecraft began orbiting Saturn. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
January 2005
Megan Sever
Huygens touches down on Titan Grins and thumbs-up signs began a press conference to announce that the Huygens probe had landed successfully on Saturn's largest moon. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
July 2006
Kathryn Hansen
Titanic Methane Mystery Solved? Planetary scientists discovered dozens of lakes, some connected by river-like channels, at Titan's north pole. Researchers suggest that the lakes could hold enough liquid methane to resupply the Saturnian moon's atmosphere with methane gas. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
August 2005
Megan Sever
Icy Methane Volcano on Titan New images taken by the Cassini spacecraft during a flyby of Saturn's largest satellite are now revealing what researchers think is evidence of a large volcano on Titan that could be erupting methane. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
June 2006
Jennifer Bogo
Beholding Saturn This mosaic of 126 images from Cassini is the most detailed, natural-color view of Saturn ever made. NASA's imaging specialist explains the stunning view from the Cassini spacecraft. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
December 2006
Top Space News Stories of 2006 Titan's Earthly and Unearthly Features... Space Technologies Fly, Lift and Roll on...Deep Impact Still Impresses... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
April 2005
Sara Pratt
Listening to Titan As the Huygens probe descended through Titan's smoggy atmosphere, scientists on Earth were able to listen in on sounds from the moon's surface. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 16, 2009
Hayley Birch
Peering into Titan's haze A new study has thrown light on the processes that form organic molecules called polyynes in the atmosphere of Titan, Saturn's largest moon. mark for My Articles similar articles
Scientific American
October 2006
George Johnson
Scientists on Religion Theists and materialists ponder the place of humanity in the universe in four books: God's Universe by O. Gingerich, The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief by F.S. Collins, The God Delusion by R. Dawkins, and Varieties of Scientific Experience by C. Sagan. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
December 21, 2001
Carolyn S. Briggs
Seeing the light A former Christian fundamentalist recalls a life of ferocious, intractable faith -- and the moments it began to crumble. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
January 2005
Sara Pratt
Frozen Volcanism on Titan In late October, the synthetic aperture radar on the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft penetrated Titan's atmosphere of organic smog and captured images of the surface, revealing features that resemble lava domes and lava flows. mark for My Articles similar articles
Science News
October 29, 2005
Spooky Sounds of Saturn These NASA Jet Propulsion Lab Web pages provide sound files based on magnetometer data from Cassini spacecraft observations of Saturn's moon Enceladus and more. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
February 2006
Kathryn Hansen
Titanic Methane Rivers Without evidence for methane-producing life, the leading hypothesis remains that Titan's visible volcanoes tap into an underground methane reservoir and bring it to the surface. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 11, 2007
Michael Gross
The Atmosphere on Titan's Moon Using spectroscopic measurements made during flybys of the Cassini craft, researchers in the U.S. can now present first insights into the reactions that lead from methane and nitrogen to the formation of tholins, which are believed to make up the orange fog that veils Titan's surface. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
March 2006
Kathryn Hansen
Titanic Methane Mystery Solved? The case of the elusive source of methane on Titan, Saturn's largest moon, could soon come to a close, some astronomers say. A new model suggests that instead of storage within surface lakes or an ocean, methane lies inside an icy crust and periodic changes release it into the atmosphere. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
July 2005
Kathryn Hansen
Titanic Lake? Cameras on NASA's Cassini spacecraft recently recorded a surface feature on Titan, Saturn's largest moon that looks remarkably lake-like. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
October 2004
Et Tu, E-Voting? Technical remedies for what ails electronic voting are in the laboratory... Engineering Ingenuity 1, Bureaucracy 0... mark for My Articles similar articles
Scientific American
November 2008
John Rennie
Looking at Moons from Apollo 8 and Cassini When this world has you down, try looking at it from another one mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
October 2003
Hydrocarbon oceans on Titan Ground-based radar telescopes finally have penetrated the hazy atmosphere of Saturn's largest moon to yield the first reliable evidence that it might have hydrocarbon oceans. mark for My Articles similar articles
Geotimes
February 2007
Cassini Sees Lakes on Titan Radar imaging from the July 22, 2006, flyby of the Cassini spacecraft is providing what researchers call "convincing evidence" for large bodies of liquid. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
December 2002
Margaret Wertheim
The Pope's Astrophysicist Meet the Vatican priest who scans the heavens for the origins of the universe. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
December 18, 2008
Andrew Moseman
Findings on Saturn's Moon Titan: You Say Ice-Spewing Volcano, I Say Squiggly Lines Rosalyn Lopes of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory made the case at the American Geophysical Union conference in San Francisco that icy volcanoes exist on Titan. mark for My Articles similar articles