NASA says goodbye to Saturn with dramatic new photo

Still looking good after all these years.
 By 
Miriam Kramer
 on 
Original image replaced with Mashable logo
Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

NASA is saying goodbye to Saturn with a newly-processed photo of the ringed planet taken during the last day of the Cassini mission.

The photo shows Saturn in all its sunlit glory, glowing gold against the blackness of space.

Cassini snapped the series of images that were stitched together to create this photo on September 13 before making its plunge into Saturn's atmosphere on September 15, destroying the spacecraft in the process.

The space probe had been exploring Saturn and its many moons since 2004, and we have no other spacecraft dedicated to studying the huge world today.

"It was all too easy to get used to receiving new images from the Saturn system on a daily basis, seeing new sights, watching things change," Elizabeth Turtle, Cassini scientist, said in a statement. "It was hard to say goodbye, but how lucky we were to be able to see it all through Cassini's eyes."

The new photo shows Saturn in natural color, according to NASA, and the image has some surprises if you know where to look.

Original image replaced with Mashable logo
Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

An annotated version of the photo shows the moons Prometheus, Pandora, Epimetheus, Janus, Enceladus, and Mimas.

It's only fitting that Cassini's final goodbye would include some of the moons it studied from close range for more than 10 years.

"Cassini's scientific bounty has been truly spectacular -- a vast array of new results leading to new insights and surprises, from the tiniest of ring particles to the opening of new landscapes on Titan and Enceladus, to the deep interior of Saturn itself," Robert West, Cassini scientist, said in the statement.

Researchers will continue to look through data returned to Earth from Cassini for years, hopefully finding even more important information in the decades to come.

But until we have a new robotic eye on Saturn consistently, new, up-close views of the world will be a thing of the past.

So, take this new photo in because it may be one of your last.

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Miriam Kramer

Miriam Kramer worked as a staff writer for Space.com for about 2.5 years before joining Mashable to cover all things outer space. She took a ride in weightlessness on a zero-gravity flight and watched rockets launch to space from places around the United States. Miriam received her Master's degree in science, health and environmental reporting from New York University in 2012, and she originally hails from Knoxville, Tennessee. Follow Miriam on Twitter at @mirikramer.

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