Saturn doesn’t just have rings — it rules an entire miniature solar https://t.co/MrqpkqJLDA of 2026, the ringed giant boasts 292 confirmed moons, far more than any other planet, with the number still climbing as astronomers keep spotting tiny new ones. Dominating them all is Titan, a colossal world larger than the planet Mercury. With a thick nitrogen atmosphere, rivers and lakes of liquid methane, and a diameter of 5,150 km, Titan feels more like a planet that got captured than a mere moon.Titan orbits Saturn at a safe distance of about 1.2 million kilometres — well beyond the outer edge of the famous ring system. Those dazzling rings, made of countless icy particles and moonlets, are confined much closer to the planet, while Titan sails majestically around the entire sprawling family of satellites. The sheer crowd of moons — from planet-sized Titan down to kilometer-scale irregular rocks — reveals just how gravitationally chaotic and crowded Saturn’s neighborhood truly is. It’s a dynamic, ever-evolving system where collisions, captures, and gravitational dances continue to shape one of the most spectacular regions in our Solar System.
Artemis II: 400,000 Kilometers from Home — A Pale Blue Dot Adrift in the Cosmos
From the window of the Orion spacecraft, racing through cislunar space on humanity’s first crewed lunar mission in over fifty years, the astronauts turned to look back at Earth.
At a distance of 400,000 kilometers (about 250,000 miles)—once the defining span of the Apollo missions—our world fades into a single, luminous blue point against the vast darkness.
No borders. No cities. Only a fragile sphere of swirling oceans and clouds, holding every human story, every dream, every life ever lived.
A quiet, humbling reminder of our smallness… and the extraordinary value of the only home we’ve ever known.
Captured during Artemis II’s sweeping journey around the Moon, this view echoes the spirit of the “Pale Blue Dot,” while signaling a bold new era in humanity’s return to deep space.
A dancing humanoid robot got a little too funky during a performance in Cupertino, California and had to be restrained by staff after knocking items off a table.
"America's challenge of today has forged man's destiny of tomorrow. And, as we leave the Moon at Taurus-Littrow, we leave as we came and, God willing, as we shall return—with peace and hope for all mankind."
—Gene Cernan, last words spoken on the lunar surface, Apollo 17 (1972)
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