5 July 2022
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  • [ 9 June 2022 ] Micrometeoroid dings James Webb mirror segment News
  • [ 12 May 2022 ] Milky Way’s supermassive black hole shines in stunning first portrait News
  • [ 9 May 2022 ] Webb optical alignment complete and virtually perfect News
  • [ 2 May 2022 ] Ingenuity zooms over Mars rover’s discarded parachute and backshell News
  • [ 14 April 2022 ] The largest comet ever seen has been measured – and it’s a whopper News
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Allan Rubin

News

Computer model explains sustained eruptions on Saturn’s moon Enceladus

29 March 2016 Astronomy Now

NASA’s Cassini spacecraft has observed geysers erupting on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus since 2005, but the process that drives and sustains these eruptions has remained a mystery. Now, scientists have pinpointed a mechanism by which cyclical tidal stresses exerted by Saturn can drive Enceladus’s long-lived eruptions.

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News Headlines

  • Micrometeoroid dings James Webb mirror segment

    9 June 2022
  • Milky Way’s supermassive black hole shines in stunning first portrait

    12 May 2022
  • Webb optical alignment complete and virtually perfect

    9 May 2022
  • Ingenuity zooms over Mars rover’s discarded parachute and backshell

    2 May 2022
  • The largest comet ever seen has been measured – and it’s a whopper

    14 April 2022
  • Home
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      • August last issue
      • July last issue
      • June last issue
  • AstroFest
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  • Observing
    • UK Sky Chart
    • Almanac
    • Scope Calc
    • DSLR Calc
  • Reviews
    • Equipment
    • Book Reviews
  • Spaceflight Now
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
    • Subscriptions
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    • Ask Astronomy Now
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    • Advertising

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