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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2017-10-02
    Description: Since Saturn arrival in June 2004, Iapetus has been studied intensively by the Cassini ISS camera [1] at various ranges. The first of two relatively close flybys in the primary mission occurred on Dec 31, 2004 at an altitude of approx.123,400 km over the northern leading hemisphere, resulting in images with a minimum pixel scale of 740 m. Detailed results of this flyby are given in [2], while this abstract covers the observations obtained earlier. Among the most important discoveries are: (a) Four giant impact basins with diameters between 390 and 550 km were detected, three of them are located in the dark terrain [3]. (b) Data revealed a 〉1300 km long ridge that marks exactly Iapetus' equator within the dark terrain. Individual mountains within the western part of the ridge reach heights of approx.20 km over surrounding terrain [3]. (c) Impact craters were confirmed to be the main geological feature within the dark terrain and at high southern latitudes. (d) There are numerous craters with dark walls roughly facing towards the central parts of the dark hemisphere [3]. (e) Almost all parts of Iapetus have been imaged at least at low resolution (〈 60 km/pxl).
    Keywords: Geophysics
    Type: Lunar and Planetary Science XXXVI, Part 4; LPI-Contrib-1234-Pt-4
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-06-06
    Description: Given the non-spherical shape of Enceladus (Thomas et al., 2007), the satellite will experience gravitational torques that will cause it to physically librate as it orbits Saturn. Physical libration would produce a diurnal oscillation in the longitude of Enceladus tidal bulge which, could have a profound effect on the diurnal stresses experienced by the surface of the satellite. Although Cassini ISS has placed an observational upper limit on Enceladus libration amplitude of F 〈 1.5deg (Porco et al., 2006), smaller amplitudes can still have geologically significant consequences. Here we present the first detailed description of how physical libration affects tidal stresses and how those stresses then might affect geological processes including crack formation and propagation, south polar eruption activity, and tidal heating. Our goal is to provide a framework for testing the hypothesis that geologic features on Enceladus are produced by tidal stresses from diurnal physical and optical librations of the satellite.
    Keywords: Geophysics
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