Saturn Content / Saturn Content for şŮşŮĘÓƵ en On Icy Enceladus, Expansion Cracks Let Inner Ocean Boil Out /curiosity/news/icy-enceladus-expansion-cracks-let-inner-ocean-boil-out <p>In 2006, the Cassini spacecraft recorded geyser curtains shooting forth from “<a href="https://news.agu.org/press-release/icequakes-likely-rumble-along-geyser-spitting-fractures-in-saturns-icy-moon-enceladus/">tiger stripe</a>” fissures near the south pole of Saturn’s moon Enceladus — sometimes as much as 200 kilograms of water per second.</p> March 23, 2022 - 4:30pm Andy Fell /curiosity/news/icy-enceladus-expansion-cracks-let-inner-ocean-boil-out Explaining the Tiger Stripes of Enceladus /curiosity/news/explaining-tiger-stripes-enceladus <p>Saturn’s tiny, frozen moon Enceladus is a strange place. Just 300 miles across, the moon is thought to have an outer shell of ice covering a global ocean 20 miles deep, encasing a rocky core. Slashed across Enceladus’ south pole are four straight, parallel fissures or “tiger stripes” from which water erupts. These fissures aren’t quite like anything else in the solar system.&nbsp;</p> December 09, 2019 - 11:53am Andy Fell /curiosity/news/explaining-tiger-stripes-enceladus The winds of Titan /news/winds-titan <p>As sand dunes march across the Sahara, vast dunes cross the surface of Saturn's largest moon, Titan. New research from a refurbished NASA wind tunnel reveals the physics of how particles move in Titan's methane-laden winds and could help to explain why Titan's dunes form in the way they do. The work is published online Dec. 8 in the journal <em>Nature</em>.</p> December 08, 2014 - 12:00am IET WebDev /news/winds-titan