This publication presents the preliminary photographic results of Voyager 1’s encounter with Saturn and its major satellites. Voyager 1 transmitted over 17,500 images in its four months of close observations of the system. Many of these images have been combined to produce mosaics and color pictures. Hundreds have yet to be closely examined.
The second Voyager spacecraft will begin its close Saturn observations in early June 1981 and make its closest approach to the planet’s northern hemisphere on August 25. Then, due to its launch during a period of rare planetary alignment occurring only once every 175 years, Voyager 2 will be able to continue on to a rendezvous with the seventh planet, Uranus, in January 1986, and perhaps even the eighth planet, Neptune, in August 1989.
Voyager 1’s primary mission is complete. But its usefulness is far from over. As we go about our daily business, Voyager 1 is searching for another frontier—the edge of our solar system. In 7 to 15 years, the spacecraft will cross the heliopause—the farthest reaches of our Sun’s magnetic field influence. Then, high above our ecliptic plane, Voyager 1 will continue its flight toward the star Alpha Ophiuchus. Eventually, Voyager 1 will be too distant to communicate with Earth and will silently drift in space forever.
Andrew J. Stofan, Acting Associate Administrator for Space Science National Aeronautics and Space Administration
The Planet
11/5/80 9 million km (5.5 million mi)
Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun and second largest in our solar system. Like Jupiter, it is a giant sphere of gas—mostly hydrogen and helium—with a possible core of rocky material. Various features in Saturn’s cloudtops are visible in the accompanying color-enhanced image of the planet’s northern hemisphere: small-scale convective cloud features (similar to, but much larger than, thunderstorms in Earth’s atmosphere) are visible in the brown belt; an isolated convective cloud with a dark ring is visible in the light brown zone; and a longitudinal wave is visible in the light blue region.
9/17/80 76 million km (47 million mi)