Fresh Features on Enceladus
Continuing my ongoing admiration of Saturn’s icy satellites, here’s the latest from Cassini showing a pair of new looks at Enceladus.

Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
A false color look reveals subtle details on Enceladus that are not visible in natural color views.
The now-familiar bluish appearance (in false color views) of the southern “tiger stripe” features and other relatively youthful fractures is almost certainly attributable to larger grain sizes of relatively pure ice, compared to most surface materials.
On the “tiger stripes,” this coarse-grained ice is seen in the colored deposits flanking the fractures as well as inside the fractures. On older fractures on other areas of Enceladus, the blue ice mostly occurs on the exposed wall scarps.
The color difference across the moon’s surface (a subtle gradation from upper left to lower right) could indicate broad-scale compositional differences across the moon’s surface. It is also possible that the gradation in color is due to differences in the way the brightness of Enceladus changes toward the limb, a characteristic which is highly dependent on wavelength and viewing geometry.
See PIA07709 for a monochrome version of this view.
Terrain on the trailing hemisphere of Enceladus (505 kilometers, or 314 miles across) is seen here. North is up.
The view was created by combining images taken using ultraviolet, green and infrared spectral filters, and then was processed to accentuate subtle color differences. The images were taken with the Cassini spacecraft narrow-angle camera on Jan. 17, 2006 at a distance of approximately 153,000 kilometers (95,000 miles) from Enceladus and at a Sun-Enceladus-spacecraft, or phase, angle of 29 degrees. Image scale is 912 meters (2,994 feet) per pixel.



































That is absolutely beautiful,never even Knew it existed!!
Cracking blog, informative and thrilling keep up the great job,a big thumbs up.
Thanks for the kind words, and glad to be of help in pointing out the solar system’s little treasures.
You might also enjoy this mosaic of Enceladus (my favorite image of it to date) as well as this movie, constructed from Cassini imagery taken during a fly-by last July.