On New Year's Eve 2004, Cassini flew past Saturn's intriguing moon
Iapetus, capturing the four visible light images that were put together
to form this global view.
The scene is dominated by a dark, heavily-cratered region, called
Cassini Regio, that covers nearly an entire hemisphere of Iapetus.
Iapetus is 1,436 kilometers (892 miles) across. The view is centered
on the moon’s equator and on roughly 90 degrees west longitude --
a location that always faces the direction of Iapetus's orbital motion
around Saturn.
Within Cassini Regio, and especially near the equator, dark deposits
with a visual reflectivity of only about 4 percent coat nearly everything
with remarkable uniformity. However, at latitudes of about 40 degrees,
the surface transitions to a much brighter, icy terrain near the pole
where the brightest icy materials have reflectivity over 60 percent.
However, this region is not uniform: Close inspection reveals that the
surface is stained by crudely north-south trending wispy streaks of darker
material, typically a few kilometers wide and sometimes tens of kilometers
long.
An ancient, 400-kilometer wide (250 miles) impact basin appears just
above the center of the disc. The basin is heavily overprinted by more
recent, smaller impact craters. The basin rim is delineated by steep scarps
that descend to the basin floor. Many of these scarps, as well as walls of
nearby craters, appear bright, probably due to exposed outcrops of
relatively clean ice. Particularly at mid-latitudes, the brightest scarp
exposures appear to face away from the equator (i.e. toward the pole).
Often, the opposite south-facing scarps are stained with the
lower-brightness material.
The most unique, and perhaps most remarkable feature discovered
on Iapetus in Cassini images is a topographic ridge that coincides
almost exactly with the geographic equator. The ridge is conspicuous
in the picture as an approximately 20-kilometer wide (12 miles) band
that extends from the western (left) side of the disc almost to the
day/night boundary on the right. On the left horizon, the peak of the
ridge reaches at least 13 kilometers (8 miles) above the surrounding
terrain. Along the roughly 1,300 kilometer (800 mile) length over
which it can be traced in this picture, it remains almost exactly parallel
to the equator within a couple of degrees. The physical origin of the
ridge has yet to be explained. It is not yet clear whether the ridge is
a mountain belt that has folded upward, or an extensional crack in
the surface through which material from inside Iapetus erupted onto
the surface and accumulated locally, forming the ridge.
The origin of Cassini Regio is a long-standing debate among scientists.
One theory proposes that its dark material may have erupted onto
Iapetus's icy surface from the interior. Another theory holds that the
dark material represented accumulated debris ejected by impact events
on dark, outer satellites of Saturn. Details of this Cassini image mosaic
do not definitively rule out either of the theories. However, they do provide
important new insights and constraints.
The uniform appearance of the dark materials at the equator, the apparent
thinning and spottiness of the dark materials at progressively higher latitudes
and dark wispy streaks near the distal margin of Cassini Regio strongly
suggest that dark material was emplaced as a coating. One of the important
new results is that no clear evidence can be found that erupted fluids have
resurfaced Cassini Regio. The high density of impact craters argues that the
terrain underlying the dark coating is relatively ancient and has not been
eradicated by its emplacement. Thus, Cassini Regio may have had its origin
in plume-style eruptions in which dark particulate materials accumulated on
the surface as fallout, perhaps in conjunction with the creation of the
equatorial ridge. On the other hand, the dark deposits in Cassini Regio may
be a surface coating consistent with, and perhaps more simply explained by,
the fall of dark materials from outside.
The view has been oriented so that the north pole is toward the top of
the picture.
Cassini acquired the images in this mosaic with its narrow angle camera on
Dec. 31, 2004, at a distance of about 172,400 kilometers (107,124 miles)
from Iapetus and at a Sun-Iapetus-spacecraft, or phase, angle of 50 degrees.
The image scale is 1 kilometer (0.6 miles) per pixel. The image has been
contrast enhanced to aid visibility of surface features.
The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the
European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. 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 and its two onboard cameras were
designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The imaging team is based at
the Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colo.
For more information about the Cassini-Huygens mission visit
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov. For images visit the Cassini
imaging team home page http://ciclops.org.