Cassini's Best Discoveries of Saturn and Its Moons (theverge.com)
Loren Grush, writing for The Verge: Early tomorrow morning, NASA scientists will say goodbye to their Cassini spacecraft -- a hardy probe the size of a school bus that has been orbiting the Saturn system for the last 13 years. Launched in 1997, Cassini has spent a whopping 20 years in space, lasting through two mission extensions while going above and beyond what it was designed to do. But tomorrow, the probe will dive into Saturn's atmosphere, where it will break apart and cease operating. It's a sad time for the scientists who have worked on this mission for years, but also a triumphant one: Cassini leaves an impressive legacy of scientific discovery in its wake. Here's a nice video to go with it.
The floating, lighter than air Saturnians shall respond in force to our raining down radioactive death upon them.
What makes America great? When we aspire. When we reach upward. This.
So yeah, this is from a UFO conspiracy YouTube channel. They took some time today to put together a really inspired montage of Cassini images from the last eight years. It's really good.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UQsDM3i4lZE&t=328s
Brought to you by Carl's Junior.
Hair today, gone tomorrow.
Table-ized A.I.
I saw an actual mock-up from JPL in a museum. It is big. Without putting it next to an actual school-bus it's hard to say how accurate that description is, though. I'm not used to comparing probes to vehicles, and thus its hard to mentally compare.
Table-ized A.I.
Cassini is a joint NASA, ESA and Italian Space Agency project. It's what makes humans great, not America.
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