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If the midweek hump has you in a contemplative spirits, this stunning image of Earth as pictured by the Cassini spacecraft from Saturn, 898 million miles (1.44 billion kilometers) away, may offer ...
NASA's Cassini probe around Saturn will take a photo of Earth on July 19, and scientists are asking Earthlings to pose for the camera.
Passing behind Saturn last Friday, NASA's Cassini spacecraft snapped a series of pictures showing the planet and its rings, including planet Earth as a "pale blue dot" 898 million miles away.
NASA's Cassini spacecraft is poised to snap a dramatic portrait of Earth Friday, capturing a mosaic showing humanity's home in space as a pinprick of light just to one side of Saturn's spectacular ...
Cassini, the NASA spacecraft whose breakthrough discoveries about Saturn and its many moons revolutionized the search for life beyond Earth, disintegrated Friday morning in the skies above the ...
The final photos ever taken by NASA's Cassini Saturn orbiter have begun coming down to Earth, and you can see them all.
This simulated view from NASA's Cassini spacecraft shows the expected positions of Saturn and Earth on July 19, around the time Cassini will take Earth's picture. Cassini will be about 898 million ...
NASA has released a natural-color image of Saturn from space, the first in which Saturn, its moons and rings, and Earth, Venus and Mars, all are visible. The new panoramic […] ...
Researchers have called for the public's help after an image appears to show an unidentified object slamming into Saturn.
Right until its final moments, the spacecraft continued to send insightful images of 'The Ringed Planet.' The mission's 'death' was conceptualized by the experts and called 'The Grand Finale.' The ...
In a stunning reminder of our place in the vastness of space, a remarkable image taken by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft shows Earth and its Moon captured alongside the awe-inspiring rings of Saturn ...
Cassini transported Huygens on their journey from Earth to Saturn. Cassini’s mission was to investigate Saturn and its system, while Huygens’ was to explore Titan, the planet’s largest moon.