 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 8.07/10
Enceladus Atlas Index
PDF 83 KB
JPEG 132 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 9.50/10
Se-1 Sindbad, North Polar Area
PDF 8.6 MB
JPEG 1.5 MB
Map Only- JPEG 386 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-2 Ali Baba
PDF 11.4 MB
JPEG 1.8 MB
Map Only- JPEG 767 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-3 Kasim
PDF 11.4 MB
JPEG 1.7 MB
Map Only- JPEG 576 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-4 Shahrazad
PDF 11.4 MB
JPEG 2.0 MB
Map Only- JPEG 1.0 MB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-5 Hamah Suci
PDF 11.4 MB
JPEG 2.0 MB
Map Only- JPEG 957 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-6 Salih
PDF 9.4 MB
JPEG 1.9 MB
Map Only- JPEG 881 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 9/10
Se-7 Bulak Sulcus
PDF 9.4 MB
JPEG 1.8 MB
Map Only- JPEG 709 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-8 Khusrau
PDF 9.4 MB
JPEG 2.0 MB
Map Only- JPEG 981 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-9 Ebony Dorsum
PDF 9.5 MB
JPEG 2.0 MB
Map Only- JPEG 925 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-10 Aziz
PDF 9.5 MB
JPEG 2.0 MB
Map Only- JPEG 950 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-11 Kamar
PDF 11.4 MB
JPEG 2.0 MB
Map Only- JPEG 1.0 MB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-12 Otbah
PDF 11.4 MB
JPEG 2.0 MB
Map Only- JPEG 988 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-13 Hassan
PDF 11.4 MB
JPEG 2.0 MB
Map Only- JPEG 938 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-14 Cashmere Sulci
PDF 11.4 MB
JPEG 2.0 MB
Map Only- JPEG 986 KB
 PIA 12783
Avg Rating: 10/10
Se-15 Damascus Sulcus, South Polar Area
PDF 8.6 MB
JPEG 2.0 MB
Map Only- JPEG 889 KB
|
|
Presented here is a complete set of cartographic map sheets from a high-resolution Enceladus atlas, a project of the Cassini Imaging Team.
The map sheets form a 15-quadrangle series covering the entire surface of Enceladus at a nominal scale of 1:500,000. An index for the atlas is included here, along with an unlabeled version of each terrain section. The map data was acquired by the Cassini imaging experiment. The mean radius of Enceladus used for projection of the maps is 252.1 kilometers (156.6 miles). Names for features have been approved by the International Astronomical Union (IAU).
This atlas is an update to the version released in December 2008 (see PIA08419). Like other recent Enceladus maps, the final controlled mosaic was shifted by 3.5 degrees to the west, compared to 2006 versions, to be consistent with the International Astronomical Union longitude definition for Enceladus.
The Cassini Equinox Mission is a joint United States and European endeavor. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington, D.C. The Cassini orbiter was designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The imaging team consists of scientists from the US, England, France, and Germany. The imaging operations center and team lead (Dr. C. Porco) are based at the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo.
For more information about the Cassini Equinox Mission visit http://ciclops.org, http://www.nasa.gov/cassini and http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov.
Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute Released: May 13, 2010 (PIA 12783)
Image/Caption Information |