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Powering prolonged hydrothermal activity inside Enceladus
DOI: 10.1038/s41550-017-0289-8 Bibcode: 2017NatAs...1..841C

Postberg, Frank; Sotin, Christophe; Čadek, Ondřej +4 more

Geophysical data from the Cassini spacecraft imply the presence of a global ocean underneath the ice shell of Enceladus1, only a few kilometres below the surface in the South Polar Terrain2-4. Chemical analyses indicate that the ocean is salty5 and is fed by ongoing hydrothermal activity6-8. In order to …

2017 Nature Astronomy
Cassini 158
Disruption of Saturn's quasi-periodic equatorial oscillation by the great northern storm
DOI: 10.1038/s41550-017-0271-5 Bibcode: 2017NatAs...1..765F

Fletcher, Leigh N.; Irwin, Patrick G. J.; Flasar, F. Michael +7 more

The equatorial middle atmospheres of the Earth1, Jupiter2 and Saturn3,4 all exhibit a remarkably similar phenomenon—a vertical, cyclic pattern of alternating temperatures and zonal (east-west) wind regimes that propagate slowly downwards with a well-defined multi-year period. Earth's quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO…

2017 Nature Astronomy
Cassini 39
Thermally anomalous features in the subsurface of Enceladus's south polar terrain
DOI: 10.1038/s41550-017-0063 Bibcode: 2017NatAs...1E..63L

Sotin, C.; Lorenz, R. D.; West, R. D. +15 more

Saturn's moon Enceladus is an active world. In 2005, the Cassini spacecraft witnessed for the first time water-rich jets venting from four anomalously warm fractures (called sulci) near its south pole1,2. Since then, several observations have provided evidence that the source of the material ejected from Enceladus is a large underground…

2017 Nature Astronomy
Cassini 36
The evolution of Saturn's radiation belts modulated by changes in radial diffusion
DOI: 10.1038/s41550-017-0287-x Bibcode: 2017NatAs...1..872K

Krupp, N.; Roussos, E.; Paranicas, C. +2 more

Globally magnetized planets, such as the Earth1 and Saturn2, are surrounded by radiation belts of protons and electrons with kinetic energies well into the million electronvolt range. The Earth's proton belt is supplied locally from galactic cosmic rays interacting with the atmosphere3, as well as from slow inward …

2017 Nature Astronomy
Cassini 21
Titan: Bubbles in focus
DOI: 10.1038/s41550-017-0122 Bibcode: 2017NatAs...1E.122H

Hanley, Jennifer

The seabed of Ligeia Mare, a hydrocarbon sea at the north pole of Titan, may be a favourable place for the separation of nitrogen and the creation of bubbles that then buoyantly rise to the sea's surface.

2017 Nature Astronomy
Cassini 3
Enceladus: Deep implications for H2
DOI: 10.1038/s41550-017-0136 Bibcode: 2017NatAs...1E.136W

Woods, Paul

2017 Nature Astronomy
Cassini 0