Imagining Titan
Neil Halelamien writes "Recently the Planetary Society released the winning entries of their Huygens Art Contest. The contest challenged contestants to create artwork depicting what they imagine the ESA's Huygens probe will find when it descends to Titan's surface. 435 people from 35 countries entered the contest, and several of the winning images look like they would make great desktop backgrounds. The Huygens encounter with Titan is due for January 14 (Friday), but it looks like there isn't any live coverage planned of this exciting event."
The Huygens probe's landing site will be near 10.9 S, 169 E (191 W). (There is uncertainty as to the exact landing site since atmospheric winds that could blow the probe around are not well known.) This is on the side of Titan facing away from Saturn, so there will be no poetic images (or any other kind of image) taken of Saturn by Huygens.
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I'm guessing the people who made those pictures are artists first and scientists second. Most of the pictures you see from NASA or in books of Saturn show the rings oriented nearly horizontal and tilted slightly towards the point of view. It isn't suprising that art depicting Saturn would do much the same. If you wanted to hit them up for scientific realism, Saturn shouldn't be visible in the pictures anyway, since as others have posted, the probe is going to enter on the far side of Titan from Saturn, and the atmosphere would obsucre it anyway.