Jump to content

Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Iapetus mountains Larger.jpg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Original
High-res Version
Reason
This picture gives an amazingly three-dimensional view of the terrain on the bizarre moon Iapetus. Unlike most space probe images taken from above, it gives a sense of the view you might get from the object's surface.
Proposed caption
Mountains on Saturn's moon Iapetus, photographed by Cassini-Huygens. Original NASA caption reads "This stunning close-up view shows mountainous terrain that reaches about 10 kilometers (6 miles) high along the unique equatorial ridge of Iapetus. The view was acquired during Cassini's only close flyby of the two-toned Saturn moon. Above the middle of the image can be seen a place where an impact has exposed the bright ice beneath the dark overlying material. The image was taken on Sept. 10, 2007, with the Cassini spacecraft narrow-angle camera at a distance of approximately 3,870 kilometers (2,400 miles) from Iapetus. Image scale is 23 meters (75 feet) per pixel."
Articles this image appears in
Iapetus (moon)
Creator
NASA

Promoted Image:Iapetus mountains Larger.jpg MER-C 03:52, 22 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]