Edge on View of Saturn’s
Rings
This is a NASA Hubble Space Telescope
snapshot of Saturn with its rings barely visible. Normally, astronomers see
Saturn with its rings tilted. Earth was almost in the plane of Saturn's rings,
thus the rings appear edge-on.

In the top image, Saturn's largest moon, Titan,
is casting a shadow on Saturn. Titan's atmosphere is a dark brown haze. The
other moons appear white because of their bright, icy surfaces. Four moons -
from left to right, Mimas, Tethys,
Janus, and Enceladus - are
clustered around the edge of Saturn's rings on the right. Two other moons
appear in front of the ring plane. Prometheus is on the right edge; Pandora, on
the left. The rings also are casting a shadow on Saturn because the Sun was
above the ring plane.
The lower photograph shows Saturn with its rings
slightly tilted. The moon called Dione, on the lower
right, is casting a long, thin shadow across the whole ring system due to the
setting Sun on the ring plane. The moon on the upper left of Saturn is Tethys.
These color images
were assembled from separate exposures taken August 6 (top) and November 17
(bottom), 1995 with the Wide Field Planetary Camera-2.