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Calypso (in false colors)
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This color image provides the best look yet at Saturn's moon Calypso, a Trojan of the larger moon Tethys. Calypso trails Tethys in its orbit by 60°. Telesto is the other Tethys Trojan, orbiting Saturn 60°ahead of Tethys. Calypso is only 22 Km (about 14 miles) across. Calypso, like many other small Saturnian moons and small asteroids, is irregularly shaped by overlapping large craters. Although the resolution here is not as high as in Cassini's best images of Pandora and Telesto, this moon appears to also have loose surface material capable of smoothing the appearance of craters. (...) The images were taken with the Cassini spacecraft narrow-angle camera on Sept. 23, 2005, at a distance of approx. 101.000 Km (about 63.000 mi) from Calypso and at a phase angle of 61°. Resolution in the original image was 602 mt per pixel (...) ".
Nota: notiamo un'incredibile somiglianza fra Calypso e l'asteroide 433-Eros. Coincidenza, o c'è una sorta di "marchio di fabbrica" che unisce le piccole lune agli asteroidi?
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