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APOD: 2023 February 26 Á Saturns Iapetus: Moon with a Strange Surface
 
Explanation:
What would make a moon look like a walnut?   
  
A strange ridge that circles   
Saturn's moon   
Iapetus's equator, visible near the bottom of the   
featured image,   
makes it appear similar to a popular   
edible nut.   
  
The origin of   
the ridge remains unknown, though, with hypotheses including ice that welled  
up from below, a ring that crashed down from above,   
and structure left over from its formation perhaps 100 million years ago.  
  
Also strange is that about half of   
Iapetus is so dark that it can   
nearly disappear when viewed from Earth, while   
the rest is, reflectively, quite bright.  
  
Observations   
show that the degree of darkness of the terrain is strangely uniform,   
as if a dark coating was somehow recently applied to an ancient and highly cratered  
surface.   
  
Last, several large impact basins occur around   
Iapetus, with a 400-kilometer  
wide crater visible near the image center, surrounded by   
deep cliffs that drop sharply to the crater floor.   
  
The featured image was taken by the Saturn-orbiting   
Cassini spacecraft during a   
flyby of Iapetus at the end of 2004.  
  
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Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: Iapetus
Publications with words: Iapetus
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