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Phoebe Pictures Released

EccentricAnomaly writes "NASA has begun to release some pictures from Cassini's Phoebe flyby last Friday. If you look at the thumbnail of this image or if you look at the right of these images, you can see a group of craters that look like a skull just south of the equator and something that looks like George Washington (wearing his wig) near the north pole. Come up with some good names for features, and you can submit your ideas to the IAU. There's a process for naming a newly discovered crater, fossa, or sulcus. By the way, the naming convention for Phoebe is people associated with Phoebe or the Greek islands."

28 of 123 comments (clear)

  1. Names associated with Phoebe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Joey, Monica, and Chandler

    1. Re:Names associated with Phoebe by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 4, Funny

      Imagine two ice miners, working the surface of Saturn's moon Phoebe. The year is 2643. They are talking about the crater they are digging in: "Smelly Cat". They talk about all the possible permutations, the fact that cats can't live on the surface of Phoebe, the fact that if they could they wouldn't be detectable by smell, what sort of cat would live on Phoebe, exactly why the poor beast smells in the first place. Could the smelly cat not be an attribute of the cat, but instead be what the cat does? A cat that smells all day? They even wonder what a smelly cat is in French, and decide that it's probably a 'chat royale avec fromage'.

      But these poor souls have no idea that just over 500 years before them there was a completely inconsequential but highly amusing television show, where a song called "Smelly Cat" played a minor character definition role. The point of this story is that we MUST have a crater named smelly cat, just to fuck with people's minds.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
  2. Oh no, not more features that look like faces! by sdo1 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Queue the wackos....

    -S

    --
    --- What parts of "shall make no law", "shall not be infringed", and "shall not be violated" don't you understand?
    1. Re:Oh no, not more features that look like faces! by Zocalo · · Score: 5, Informative
      Not yet... The real wackos will be eagerly waiting for the pictures of monolith shaped objects, ideally on Iapetus.

      Not only is Iapetus one of the moons actually discovered by Cassini (in 1671), but it has one black hemisphere and one white hemisphere. It is thought that dust accumulated from Pheobe is responsible for the coating on the darker hemisphere. Intriguingly, there is also a small black dot in the middle of the white hemisphere, exactly as described in 2001 (the book, not the film)...

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    2. Re:Oh no, not more features that look like faces! by Zocalo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Life immitated art. The unusual colouration was known about for a long while - Cassini himself observed it when the moon seemed to "disappear" - and is a reason why Clark chose Iapetus for the location of the monolith. However, while the novel was written in the late 1960s, the anomaly in the pale surface was only detected by the Voyager flybys. There is a comment about the "black dot" in the foreward of one of the sequels, I forget which one, but Clark received a photo of the anomaly from NASA with the comment "Thinking of you..." or words to that effect.

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    3. Re:Oh no, not more features that look like faces! by gobbo · · Score: 4, Informative
      Not only is Iapetus one of the moons actually discovered by Cassini (in 1671), but it has one black hemisphere and one white hemisphere. It is thought that dust accumulated from Pheobe is responsible for the coating on the darker hemisphere.

      Well, since the colour of Iapetus' dark hemisphere is a different hue than Phoebe's, that theory is in question. See Space.com's page on Iapetus.

    4. Re:Oh no, not more features that look like faces! by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah, but debris from impacts with Phoebe may be the source of some of the newly discovered small moons of Saturn: Skadi, Paaliaaq, Albiorix, Suttug, etc..

      btw, a mythology search show Suttug has the best story, he's a Dwarf that stole the mead of inspiration from the Gods.

      --
      There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
  3. Fakes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    In http://ciclops.lpl.arizona.edu/media/ir/2004/197_2 07_1.jpg that photo, I think I see a wire. I declare these are fakes! Tin foil hats set to maximum strength! Full conspiracy ahead!

  4. Yeah, looks like by Anti+Frozt · · Score: 4, Funny
    • "...something that looks like George Washington."

    You brainwashed fools. That actually is George Washington. He's been hiding on Phoebe all this time, waiting for the state of affairs in the United States to hit rock-bottom before making his triumphant return and lifting American society to its pinnacle.

    Judging from the clarity of the picture, it looks like he's making his final launch checks ;)

    --
    In C++, friends can touch each others private parts.
  5. Chaos abounds by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Aparently these moons occupy two of the most chaotic orbits in the solar system so it's no surprize that they should end up on the front page of slashdot.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  6. Phoebe Naming Conventions by Snarf · · Score: 3, Funny

    Why not name the features after other characters played by Lisa Kudrow?

  7. Stunning by the_twisted_pair · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Really, I mean it: this is an ancient bit of rock whirling about in space, and we can study it from the comfort of home. Perversely, images like this always remind me that life is so short; doesn't anyone else see things like this and feel disheartened at mortality ? There is so much I will never have time to know, still less understand.

    1. Re:Stunning by CFBMoo1 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yeah it's pretty upsetting really. I'm quite jelous at all the people in the future who will take space travel for granted rather then appreciate it or look at it with awe as we do now.

      It's kinda like driving a car, everyone is so used to it that it's ho-hum. Sad to say I can see that happening with space travel, boring nothing ho-hum till some alien species decides were food, cheap labor, and/or whatever.

      If I could get on a ship and travel the galaxy and see everything I would. Unfortunatly I can't and probebly never will. Course there's a lot to see on our own planet as well. Though it's mostly a "been there, done that" deal, except for maybe the ocean floor. Mmmm crushing pressure. :)

      --
      ~~ Behold the flying cow with a rail gun! ~~
    2. Re:Stunning by 3fingers · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If I could get on a ship and travel the galaxy and see everything I would....

      Well get on a plane and travel the earth - there is more unbelievably beautiful and amazing stuff here than anyone could see in 10 lifetimes, go to Ko Phi Phi in Thailand, Inis Mór in Ireland, see the Pyramids, Yosemite, sail the Chang Jiang etc etc etc etc or you could sit by your computer and wish your life away in some space travelling dreamland........your choice

      --
      There are 10 different kinds of people, those who understand binary and those who do not
    3. Re:Stunning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I'm quite jelous at all the people in the future who will take space travel for granted rather then appreciate it or look at it with awe as we do now.

      IF they have it as commodity. It's one of these things, just like "food pills", "rocket cars" and "personal helicopters" that children always think are 20 years away. Read children's (or even "big kids"') prophecies from, say, 1982, and you hear the same story. They didn't dream of tiny mobile phones, or portable DVD-players, or iPods. Likewise, you can't dream of what really will be available in 20 years, but keep on repeating "official" futuristic dreams. (neither can I, obviously, but I have perspective on elusive standard dreams and their feasibility).

      It's also quite possible there'll NEVER BE wide-spread economic space travel available. Laws of physics aren't bending enough at this point; maybe they will, maybe they won't. Getting a single person out of Earth's gravity well, much less getting that person quickly enough to some other interesting place, well, that's one hell of a challenge. Read about how difficult (not to mention expensive) it's to get couple of people and enough supplies to Mars... or even moon, for that matter.

      And I'd readily recommend taking advice of the other reply, of enjoying some of practically unlimited wonders of Gaia. There's no point in envying something that may never happen.

  8. Springfield by junklight · · Score: 4, Funny

    There ought to be a rule that *somewhere* on every planet,moon, star etc. is called springfield.

  9. Real Conversation with my wife by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 5, Funny

    Me: Hm - looks like they're about to take pictures of Phoebe. Should be pretty cool.

    My Lovely Wife: Well, out of all the cast of "Friends" I thought she had the best career options.

    Me: ...

    (Really, she's only like this on astronomy.)

  10. Screw this. by torpor · · Score: 5, Funny


    I'm sick of looking at black and white pictures of far-off places where the use of nuclear fusion not only makes sense but is also the only way to bring life to desolate locales.

    I wanna go there. Where is my Eagle lander damnit?!! Where is my General Enterprises Hull? Where is my Millenium Falcon? Where is my Beaver-1?

    Screw all this mechano-assembly 'space sciences', screw all this "lets invade Iraq so we can feed our fat society even more plastic landfill", screw all this "nuclear fusion will kill the Earth", I want my space-hardened nuke-powerplant packin' HumVee, and I want it NOW!!

    Seriously. I'd move to Phoebe TODAY. But the closest I can get is a shitty winnebago on some beach in the Netherlands, or some crap like that. What's the frickin' holdup people?

    Sheesh. New World Order my ass. Those guys have no clue what they're doing ... Vote Me For King, and I'll make it -compulsary- for all schoolkids to learn fusion plant physics on Phoebe ...

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    1. Re:Screw this. by SEWilco · · Score: 3, Funny

      Every Hummer will soon have a nuclear plant to power the electric armor. Yes, I mean the civilian version, to protect against shopping cart attacks and door dingers trying to use the half parking space left on each side of one.

  11. Atlantis! by pjt33 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Looks more like concentric circles to me. Maybe we've found the true location of Atlantis.

  12. That's no moon by DCowern · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've got a bad feeling about this.

  13. Re:Submitting good names? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not a good idea.
    Eventually he'd get bored and start giving out names like "megagalaxusprimord", "hypertron" , "honeyiloveyoupleasedontleave" , "ihatethisjob", "imastar" and "uranus" .

    Not to worry though! You can name your very own star here. Just don't come back to me when the aliens find out what you named their mother (earth)

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  14. Re:Submitting good names? by BTWR · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I always wonder how stupid people have to be if they believe they are really "naming" stars.

    Actually, I take that back. It's more of a Slashdot-we're-nerds sort of thinking to know offhand that they're bogus, but if you ever see one of those advertisements, they really seem legit: "Your star will be registered in the A.E.A.S.C. database" or whatever - that can mean "some excel file somewhere." They make users think they are officially naming the celestial body.
    You'd have just as much sucess with an ad "Name an orphan in Liberia after your sweetheart! It'll be registered in L.O.L. database!" - it'd have just as much "official-ness."
    I guess you're better off printing your own "star" coordinates off your own computer and save the $39.99...

  15. Re:Pronounciation? by dustpuppy_de · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not being a native English speaker, could someone clear this up for me? How do you pronounce Phoebe?

    Since it's not named after the character from the TV Series "Friends", but after an old greek goddess, it is completely irrelevant how the america-centric Slashdot crowd pronounces it. I'm from Germany, we say "Föbe", with Umlaut, but only the Gods know what the old Greek said. Or maybe a classical philologist.
    In any case, the english pronounciation "Fee-Bee" is most probably totally wrong.

  16. Gotta name something the island of Lesbos by colinmc151 · · Score: 5, Funny

    One of the Greek islands is the island of Lesbos (where the poet Sappho first wrote about love between women, and yes this is where the term lesbian comes from). This would be seriously cool on several counts:

    • Phobe being a female figure in Greek mythology this fits better than a lot of male oriented names.
    • It would annoy the U.S. right wing seriously, which at this point is a very good thing.
    • Because of the previous point, this may make it easier to get cash for space exploration, as in:
      • To the left talk about how more money would allow more heroes of the left be honored.
      • For the right talk about such features have to obliterated

    In other words everyone who loves space exploration wins :-) .

  17. I saw Nixon's face in a green pepper once by Shimmer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You can see a group of craters that look like a skull just south of the equator and something that looks like George Washington (wearing his wig) near the north pole.

    Is this really the most important/interesting thing that Slashdot can tell us about the Phoebe mission so far? What next, a bulletin about a cloud that is shaped like a bunny rabbit?

    --
    The most rabid believers in American Exceptionalism are the exact same people whose policies are destroying it.
  18. Dust on Iapetus by Rhodnius · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The theory that Iapetus was darkened by dust from Phoebe is alluring, but doesn't really hold up to scrutiny. It looks logical when you see a drawing of the Saturn system, with the half-dark moon sitting next to the dark moon, but that's about where the plausibility ends.

    First, the moons are far, far apart. Phoebe orbits 5x farther from Saturn as Iapetus does - a difference on the order of 10 million km. Phoebe would have to be emitting a tremendous amount of dust for Iapetus to pick up any remotely visible amount of it.

    Second, their orbits are inclined approximately 160 degrees apart. Iapetus orbits almost in Saturn's equatorial plane; Phoebe is nowhere near it. There's no astrophysical reason for the dust to get into Saturn's equatorial plane and stay there waiting for Iapetus. (Saturn's rings remain compressed into the equatorial plane by tidal forces near the planet, but those forces become extremely weak that far out. Iapetus orbits 30x farther from Saturn than the outermost large ring, and tidal forces decrease with at least the square of distance.) The volume of space that would have to be dusted by Phoebe to visibly darken Iapetus is simply prohibitively large.

    Third, if Iapetus is darkened by dust, why not any of Saturn's other moons? OK, we don't yet know if Titan is, but the other moons should show some evidence of the same process, and they don't.

    Fourth, Iapetus isn't half-and-half black and white like a chessboard or that race in Star Trek. Voyager showed that the dark area is a roughly circular area, roughly centered on the leading orbital hemisphere, with a highly irregular border. And there are light spots within the dark area - not a single dot in the center, but a few separated irregular areas. It's a surface feature of the moon with lower albedo, not "this half is black."

    The dark area occupies a proportion of Iapetus's sphere similar to the proportion of the Pacific Ocean compared to Earth's sphere. Discounting the Velikovskyists, we're fairly sure that the Pacific Ocean was formed by Earthbound processes on our planet, so Iapetus's geological history could well have had something of similar scale.

    I doubt we'll ever know for sure until an Iapetus lander spacecraft, which isn't even remotely in NASA's future plans yet. Yes, something weird happened on Iapetus, but it wasn't dust from little Phoebe.

  19. More pictures just in... by marcel-jan.nl · · Score: 3, Informative

    The pictures mentioned earlier are still not taken from the closest point to Phoebe.

    In the Imaging Diary you'll find the latest pictures, amongst which one taken from 2365 kilometers (1,470 miles).