Posted on 07/15/2005 7:14:11 AM PDT by LRS
Spongy-Looking Hyperion Tumbles Into View July 11, 2005
Two new Cassini views of Saturn's tumbling moon Hyperion offer the best looks yet at one of the icy, irregularly-shaped moons that orbit the giant, ringed planet.
The image products released today include a movie sequence and a 3D view, and are available at http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov, http://www.nasa.gov/cassini and http://ciclops.org.
The views were acquired between June 9 and June 11, 2005, during Cassini's first brush with Hyperion.
Hyperion is decidedly non-spherical and its unusual shape is easy to see in the movie, which was acquired over the course of two and a half days. Jagged outlines visible on the moon's surface are indicators of large impacts that have chipped away at its shape like a sculptor.
Preliminary estimates of its density show that Hyperion is only about 60 percent as dense as solid water ice, indicating that much of its interior (40 percent or more) must be empty space. This makes the moon more like an icy rubble pile than a solid body.
In both the movie and the 3D image, craters are visible on the moons surface down to the limit of resolution, about 1 kilometer (0.6 mile) per pixel. The fresh appearance of most of these craters, combined with their high spatial density, makes Hyperion look something like a sponge.
The moon's spongy-looking exterior is an interesting coincidence, as much of Hyperions interior appears to consist of voids. Hyperion is close to the size limit where, like a child compacting a snowball, internal pressure due to the moons own gravity will begin to crush weak materials like ice, closing pore spaces and eventually creating a more nearly spherical shape.
... http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2005-114
(Excerpt) Read more at jpl.nasa.gov ...
Are we reading about, and looking at, a captured comet?
A loofah Sponge or a pumice stone?......
Sponge Bob Square Pants?
Captured comet? Loofah? Pumice?
Oh, please - it's a lava rock from God's gas grill.
Ping
I think you mean 'falafel.'
> ... a captured comet?
Interesting. Unlike Tempel's size, Hyperion (according to the NASA site) is 204 by 162 by 132 miles, and it's spongy (in Jupiter's gravity) rather than powdery (in the Sun's gravity).
I don't know where to take it from here....
That would be a huge comet. But just how large could one be?
But as for the surface, "Spongy looking", yes. But it very well could be powdery...
"Possible former comet" ping. Not a ping list though. :')
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