Launched on Oct. 15, 1997, reaching Saturn in June 2004, after two decades in space, the Cassini satellite is making it’s Grand Finale on September 15th by plunging into the planet’s atmosphere. As a sort of retrospective here’s an animation from “In Saturn’s Rings”, a project that uses high resolution images from the Cassini to create videos that portray the journey of the satellite as it orbits the ringed planet and passes near its moons. This video is from 2014 and includes a glimpse of Titan in the lower left at the beginning, then a fly-by of Mimas with a good view of the Herschel Crater followed by a transit of the ring plane, leading into a fly-by of Enceladus, an ice-geyser moon.
We at San Diego Free Press love watching all kinds of video. Those short visual stories entertain, inform, and agitate in a way completely different from the written word.
Since our platform is about expressing ideas and ideals instead of cash flow, clicks, or fundraising, we have the freedom to include a wide range of topics and formats that might not work elsewhere. We don’t need or want paid content, promotional materials, or story lines designed to please donors.
So the idea here is to present videos one or more of the editors feel speaks to them. Sometimes it will be news. Sometimes it will be history. And a lot of the time it will be culture. You can not and should not separate these things: it is diversity and intersectionality that makes our movement strong.
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