Space

Cassini's 13 Years Exploring Saturn Just Came To An End

After exploring Saturn for more than a decade, NASA's Cassini probe took a final dive into the planet's atmosphere Friday.

Cassini's 13 Years Exploring Saturn Just Came To An End
NASA
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The Cassini spacecraft's 13-year mission exploring Saturn is over.

Cassini plunged into the planet's upper atmosphere at 77,000 miles per hour around 6:30 a.m. ET Friday. Because Saturn is roughly 890 million miles away from Earth, NASA scientists didn't receive the craft's final signal until 8 a.m.

Before it burned up, Cassini sent back data on the composition of Saturn's upper atmosphere. On Thursday, the spacecraft beamed back its last set of photos of the planet's system.

Cassini Spacecraft Gets A 'Goodbye Kiss' Before It Meets Its End
Cassini Spacecraft Gets A 'Goodbye Kiss' Before It Meets Its End

Cassini Spacecraft Gets A 'Goodbye Kiss' Before It Meets Its End

Cassini made its final flyby of Titan, a moon it's visiting almost every month for over a decade.

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Those are just some of the more than 450,000 images Cassini took of Saturn and our solar system over the years.

NASA launched Cassini in 1997, and the spacecraft reached Saturn in 2004. The probe's mission ended because it was low on fuel.