With its stunning rings and dozen of moons, Saturn is an intriguing planet for
many reasons. Barely smaller than Jupiter, it formed four billion years ago and it is made mainly
of gas. It is also the only known planet that is less dense than water, meaning that if it could be
placed inside an imaginary gigantic bathtub it would float. Saturn has a huge magnetosphere and a
stormy atmosphere, with winds clocked at 1,800 kilometers (1,118 miles) per hour near its equator.
Of the 31 known moons orbiting Saturn, Titan is the largest. Bigger than the planet Mercury and our
own moon, Titan is of particular interest to scientists because it is the only moon in the solar
system with its own atmosphere.
For centuries, Saturn and its rings puzzled observers, in particular, Italian astronomer Galileo
Galilei. The first to use a telescope to explore the wonders of the heavens, Galileo couldn't
understand why Saturn looked different in the night sky at varying times-- a phenomenon that we
now know is caused by the shifting of our view of the ring plane. Because of this, when the rings
face Earth edge-on they are virtually invisible. They seem to reappear months later when our angle
of view changes. Despite major advances in lens technology since Galileo's time, many questions still need to be answered through exploration of Saturn's rings.
Launched from Kennedy Space Center on Oct. 15, 1997, the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft will reach
the Saturnian region in July 2004. The mission is composed of two elements: The Cassini orbiter
that will orbit Saturn and its moons for four years, and the Huygens probe that will dive into
the murky atmosphere of Titan and land on its surface. The sophisticated instruments onboard
these spacecraft will provide scientists with vital data to help understand this mysterious,
vast region.
Cassini-Huygens is an international collaboration between three space agencies. Seventeen
nations contributed to building the spacecraft. The Cassini orbiter was built and managed by
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The Huygens probe was built by the European Space Agency.
The Italian Space agency provided Cassini's high-gain communication antenna. More than 250
scientists worldwide will study the data collected.