{QTtext}{timescale:100}{size:16}{font:Arial}{backColor:0,0,0} {textColor:65535,65535,65535}{width:480}{height:100}{justify:left} [00:00:00] Cassini [00:00:04] [00:00:12] In 1997, a spacecraft the size of a school bus was launched by JPL with a mission to explore the fascinating ringed planet Saturn and its many moons. [00:00:24] Seven years and 2.2 billion miles of travel later, Cassini arrived. [00:00:27] Dave Doody, Cassini Real Time Operations Lead We are studying the atmosphere of Saturn, the rings, [00:00:29] the moons, the magnetic environment, and sending all of the data back to Earth. [00:00:36] Jo Pitesky, PlanetQuest Scientist and Cassini Science Planner We have seen for the first time that there is material coming off from the surface of the moon [00:00:46] and streaming out behind it, and we see that it is forming part of the rings. [00:00:46] We are only finding out now how old they are, how young some of them are, did they come from an old broken up satellite? [00:00:54] Are they still being regenerated? Why have they lasted so long? [00:00:58] Since its arrival at Saturn in 2004, Cassini has continuously revealed the secrets of the planet and its moons. [00:01:08] Scott Edgington, Cassini Scientist So it’s really cold, and we are seeing a lot of these lakes. [00:01:12] It’s really the land of lakes, more than Minnesota.The surface temperature on Titan is very very cold. [00:01:17] Water ice is hard as a rock; it’s not going to be a liquid, so we know that water ice is not forming these lakes. [00:01:27] However if you go back to the atmosphere, you have natural gas - methane. [00:01:31] Its properties are just right, the temperatures are just right, that it condenses, forms rivers and eventually these lakes. [00:01:41] Saturn, the sixth planet from the sun, is a gas giant. [00:01:44] Studying Saturn, its rings and its moons will help us understand more about how our entire solar system works. [00:01:52] Todd Barber, Cassini Propulsion Engineer Saturn is like the solar system as a whole and miniature. [00:01:56] You start to answer questions that we want to know about life on Earth, like how did life start here? [00:01:59] How did the solar system form? You can study that on a smaller scale with Saturn. [00:02:06] Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology [00:02:21]