Saturn Is Ready for Its Close-Up
In January 2005, about three weeks after separating from the Cassini orbiter, the Huygens probe touched down at its final destination: the surface of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan. The first packets of data from the probe streamed back to Earth, and NASA scientists beheld a landscape: in the foreground, a dry riverbed strewn with ice chunks, and in the distance, beds of sand, gravel, and rock.

Amid the 150 images of the ringed planet and its moons in the book Saturn: A New View, the one captured in those first minutes serves in a very real sense as a vantage point. It may be easy to view Saturn’s signature rings with some detachment, as a confirmation of an image remembered from childhood. But the tight, focused shot of Titan’s terrain gives us the feeling of standing on its surface, its rocks at our feet.
Joan Horvath ‘81, coauthor of this new collection, was one of thousands of people from 17 countries who helped launch the Cassini-Huygens mission. In the book, she outlines the team’s ambitious objective: to build an unmanned spacecraft, the size of a school bus, armed with cameras and instruments and able to survive a seven-year flight before entering its orbit around Saturn and ultimately sending a probe to Titan. Planning the mission was an arduous feat. As Horvath explains in one of the book’s few essays, “It’s similar to a mountain-climbing expedition–there is no food to be found on the icy upper slopes, so mountaineers need to carry everything they eat. The longer the expedition, the more food needed and the heavier the load. By comparison, getting into Earth orbit is car camping!”
That planning process took 15 years. To maximize fuel efficiency, engineers calculated how to use the gravitational forces of the solar system to swing the spacecraft around Venus and Earth, each planet providing a “gravity assist” that propelled the craft in the right direction at the right speed.
Most of the photographs in this book were taken by Cassini’s two cameras: one wide-angle and the other narrow-angle, for close-up shots. Horvath and her collaborators, Laura Lovett and Jeff Cuzzi, sifted through some 34,000 images taken in the first year in orbit to assemble 150 of the best. Some pictures are sequential, overlapping frames that form a composite image of the planet. Others are close-ups of lunar craters and images of Saturn’s icy rings.
As Cassini orbits Saturn over the last years of its mission, scientists hope to deepen their understanding of the planet and its moons. They also hope to answer important questions like whether the atmospheres of Saturn and its moons harbor organic chemicals that may offer clues about Earth’s beginnings. Meanwhile, the photos in this book may renew our awe at our own small but remarkable outpost in the universe.
Recent Books
From the MIT community
Let There Be Light: Modern Cosmology and Kabbalah, A New Conversation between Science and Religion
By Howard Smith ‘66
New World Library, 2006, $15.95
Group Cognition: Computer Support for Building Collaborative Knowledge
By Gerry Stahl ‘67
MIT Press, 2006, $45.00
Breast Cancer Treatment by Focused Microwave Thermotherapy
By Alan J. Fenn, MIT researcher
Jones and Bartlett, 2007, $72.95
Structured Finance Modeling with Object-Oriented VBA
By Evan Tick ‘82, SM ‘82
John Wiley and Sons, 2007, $80.00
A Patent on Murder
By Charles M. Kaplan ‘53
Self-published through Booklocker, 2006, $16.95
Goldfield Mountain Hikes
By Ted Tenny ‘67
Gem Guides, 2006, $16.95
No Limit Hold ‘Em: Theory and Practice
By David Sklansky and Ed Miller ‘00
Two Plus Two Publishing, 2006, $29.95
Evocative Objects: Things We Think With
Edited by Sherry Turkle, professor of social studies and director of the MIT Initiative on Technology and Self
MIT Press, 2007, $26.95
Please submit titles of books and papers published in 2006 and 2007 to be considered for this column.
Contact MIT News
E-mail mitnews@technologyreview.com
Write MIT News, One Main Street,
7th Floor, Cambridge MA 02142
Fax 617-475-8043
Keep Reading
Most Popular
The inside story of how ChatGPT was built from the people who made it
Exclusive conversations that take us behind the scenes of a cultural phenomenon.
ChatGPT is about to revolutionize the economy. We need to decide what that looks like.
New large language models will transform many jobs. Whether they will lead to widespread prosperity or not is up to us.
Sam Altman invested $180 million into a company trying to delay death
Can anti-aging breakthroughs add 10 healthy years to the human life span? The CEO of OpenAI is paying to find out.
GPT-4 is bigger and better than ChatGPT—but OpenAI won’t say why
We got a first look at the much-anticipated big new language model from OpenAI. But this time how it works is even more deeply under wraps.
Stay connected
Get the latest updates from
MIT Technology Review
Discover special offers, top stories, upcoming events, and more.