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Stories, updates, insights, and original analysis from The Planetary Society.
A NEW! Impact on Jupiter
On the same day as a team of astronomers released new Hubble Space Telescope images of last year's Jupiter impact, the original discoverer of the 2009 impact scar, Anthony Wesley, reported on an amateur astronomy forum that he had observed a new impact on Jupiter.
Phoenix is dead...long live Phoenix!
The latest HiRISE images of the Phoenix polar lander, taken near Mars' northern summer solstice, show why we haven't heard from the spacecraft since it fell silent on November 2, 2008: it appears the solar panels have collapsed.
The most amazing image of Enceladus Cassini has captured yet
Every time I think Cassini has captured the coolest image of Enceladus ever, it does better.
Space carnival, rover update, Planetary Radio Live!
Just a linky post today, as I am nanny-less.
Hey, I'm on APOD today!
A big thanks to Bob Nemiroff, editor of NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Day website, for picking my composition of a set of Cassini photos of Dione and Titan for today's offering.
A calming Titan
Usually I like Mondays, but today I'm feeling a bit overwhelmed. When I get overwhelmed, I look at pictures from Cassini.
Dione and Titan
It's axiomatic that as soon as I post about pretty Cassini pictures, another set of pretty photos will appear on the raw images website.
A feast of pretty pictures from Cassini
Cassini has it almost too easy. Point at anything in the Saturn system and you're guaranteed of a shot that looks, at least, pretty.
Venus Express evidence for recent hot-spot volcanism on Venus
Venus? What? Somebody still studies that planet? Yes, and in fact there's an active spacecraft there: Venus Express, the poor little sister to Mars Express.
A busy day for Cassini: Dione plus bonus Enceladus and Janus
The Cassini Saturn orbiter just completed its second very close flyby of Saturn's mid-sized iceball moon Dione, and the images from that encounter have been streaming onto the Cassini raw images website this morning.
Pretty picture: Rhea, rings, and two little moons
Here's a lovely picture whose components came down from Cassini a few days ago.
Pretty picture: An unexplained chain of elliptical craters on the Moon
Here's the first cool pic I've managed to produce from the recently-released Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera data set.
My arduous journey to the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera images
It's been two weeks since Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter mission released a flood of data to the Planetary Data System, but I haven't posted any pictures dug out of the camera data yet. This post will explain why.
Downloading the "First Voyage into the PDS" class
Here's how to watch the class on how to access Voyager data through the Planetary Data System, which I conducted to a small audience this morning.
Space Imaging 3: First Voyage into the PDS
I've finally caught my breath enough to contemplate starting up my imaging classes again.
Opportunity's at the twin craters
Just a little update here to post a Navcam panorama from Opportunity showing that the rover successfully arrived yesterday at the doublet crater she's been aiming for since she left Concepcion a couple of weeks ago.
In which I dip my toes into an ocean of Hubble data
I am just drowning in data right now, and I couldn't be happier.
A new view of Callisto
Here's a lovely amateur-produced color image of Jupiter's moon Callisto, or, as its artist Daniel Macháček calls it,
A trio of pretty Cassini pics
It's been a little while since I posted any Cassini pictures just because they were pretty, so here's a few recent ones, produced by amateurs from the images available on the Cassini raw images website.
The far side of Phobos
Now here is an unusual image of Phobos, Mars' moon.