by JohnD » Wed May 02, 2012 5:28 pm
At least my quick and wrong post about Helene's gravity got you talking about science, instead of art and beauty.
Which it is. Beautiful.
My apologies - I did a quick google and took the first g-figure I found.
So at such a low surface gravity, and like Phobos' grooves, it seems unlikely that any surface bound process can have caused these flow-like markings. Unlike Phobos, they curve across the surface as if they moved at right angles to contours, like a downward flow would do. Could that be some extra-Hellenic cloud, ice crystals thrown off Dione by the large impact that span it again after it was tidally locked to Saturn, so that now, after becoming locked again, its most heavily cratered hemisphere faces forward?
John
At least my quick and wrong post about Helene's gravity got you talking about [u]science[/u], instead of art and beauty.
Which it is. Beautiful.
My apologies - I did a quick google and took the first g-figure I found.
So at such a low surface gravity, and like Phobos' grooves, it seems unlikely that any surface bound process can have caused these flow-like markings. Unlike Phobos, they curve across the surface as if they moved at right angles to contours, like a downward flow would do. Could that be some extra-Hellenic cloud, ice crystals thrown off Dione by the large impact that span it again after it was tidally locked to Saturn, so that now, after becoming locked again, its most heavily cratered hemisphere faces forward?
John