PIA 08329: Backlit Saturn and Earth
Looking back towards the inner solar system from Saturn (a distance of 1400 million kilometres), this image shows Saturn's disc and rings backlit by the Sun. It is a sobering thought that the tiny pale blue dot visible in this colour-enhanced image, is our planet Earth! (Look inside the G ring and above the brighter main rings to the left of Saturn.)
PIA 13424: The colourful equator of Rhea
These colour-enhanced images show recent bluish material which was presumably deposited on Rhea's surface since the formation of the impact craters. The image size is 130km across, about the size of the home counties of South-East England.
PIA 11688: Bursting at the Seams
A superb view of the plumes near the south pole of Enceladus, taken when Cassini flew through the jets on November 21st, 2009. The jets emerge from the tiger stripes which may contain liquid water, despite Enceladus receiving only 1 per-cent of the sunlight that Earth receives.
PIA 12481: Reflection of sunlight off Titan lake
As the Sun sets on Titan, sunlight glints off a hydrocarbon lake in this infra-red image taken on July 8th, 2009.
PIA 11690: Global view of Iapetus dichotomy
About 40 per-cent of the surface of Iapetus is coated in a dark material, deposited on the leading hemisphere. This material is thought to originate on Phoebe and causes the icy surface to melt further due to decreased reflectivity, relative to the uncoated trailing hemisphere. Over a long timescale this reinforces the contrast to its present-day level. The irregularly-shaped moon Hyperion is also coated but its chaotic rotation means the coating is uniform.