Tiny Moon is No Space Station
An anonymous reader writes "With today's image release, Cassini's tour of Saturn's remarkable system of 31 moons has taken the probe past one of the ringed planet's natural wonders: Mimas. The 250 mile wide satellite suffered a catastrophic impact that opened a wound one third of its diameter and nearly split the moon in half. Today, Mimas bears a striking resemblance to the original Star Wars' Death Star, which wreaked havoc on planets using its laser-focusing dish. In place of the laser dish, Mimas carries a crater peak the size of Mount Everest."
as if thousands of web-browsers cried out and slashdotted a server.
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actually, no, sorry, it is a moon.
Does my bum look big in this?
I dunno, that peak in the center could just be the carefully hidden tip of the laser.
That picture looks like it was still taken from aways off and surely the Empire wouldn't want a passing shuttle to uncover it.
Nope, short of a closer look, possibly a few rovers and manned flights I think for now we better continue to assume that it IS in fact a space station planning the immenient distruction of earth. Likely they were on their way here and ran out of gas.
1997? I know Lucas would like for us to forget about that "quaint" 70's version of the film, I didn't think he'd get scientific institutions to buy it!
"The objective of securing the safety of Americans from crime and terror has been achieved." -- John Ashcroft
Thanks, on behalf of everyone, for the explanation. I'm sure that no one who visits this site knows how the Death Star works.
"Proudly Posting Without Reading The Article"
Oddly enough the death star would fit nicely into the crater. The crater is about 130km across and the death star one is 120km across.
Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all
. . .that's a plagarism!
Really, editors. Read the articles and if the submitter ripped part of it in place of writing their own synopsis, give credit where credit is due.
The ability to destroy a planet is insignificant, next to the power of the Slashdot effect.
This picture is by Voyager, in 1980: APOD 990425. Doesn't look much worse to me (IANAA). No idea how close to Mimas Voyager was compared to Cassini, of course.
I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.