Peering from the shadows, the Saturn-facing hemisphere of tantalizing inner moon Enceladus poses in this Cassini spacecraft image. North is up in the dramatic scene captured during November 2016 as Cassini’s camera was pointed in a nearly sunward direction about 130,000 kilometers from the moon’s bright crescent. In fact, the distant world reflects over 90 percent of the sunlight it receives, giving its surface about the same reflectivity as fresh snow. A mere 500 kilometers in diameter, Enceladus is a surprisingly active moon. Data and images collected during Cassini’s flybys have revealed water vapor and ice grains spewing from south polar geysers and evidence of an ocean of liquid water hidden beneath the moon’s icy crust.
Credit: Cassini Imaging Team, SSI, JPL, ESA, NASA
porcoesphino@mander.xyz 2 weeks ago
Why go to so much effort with the credits but not deep link to post on NASA’s picture of the day?
apod.nasa.gov/apod/fap/ap260207.html
Innerworld@lemmy.world 2 weeks ago
Deep links galore, guys.
Would you like me to stop posting now?
porcoesphino@mander.xyz 2 weeks ago
I’m glad to see people finding interesting and beautiful things to post, I just don’t understand copying content and not sharing the link. Copying to me is a quick “that’s pretty”. Sharing the link helps the creator and anyone new that wants to learn more about the content. It’s such a small amount of work from the poster so that everyone that sees it can get a little more out of it.
Mostly though, I just don’t understand why you attributed so well, taking the time to format links and look them up, but didn’t do a quick copy paste of where you saw it. I’m not even trying to have a dig at your behaviour here, it’s just something I don’t relate to.
I hope you keep posting, I just think the link adds a lot and helps avoid things like CG.