New Huygens Titan descent video available 24
pamaru writes "Scientists from the Cassini/Huygens mission Descent Imager/Spectral Radiometer (DISR) team have released new Huygens video footage. "This descent animation lasting about 1 minute starts at an altitude of 300 km and moves eastward along the trajectory that the Huygens probe traveled on its journey to Titan's surface. The Cassini orbiter ISS, RADAR & VIMS images of this area are displayed in quick succession followed by DISR mosaics from increasingly lower altitudes. The surface color is approximately what a human observer riding along with the probe would see, if she or he could see the surface through Titan's atmospheric haze."
This is cool stuff... grab it from the DISR homepage or from Coral Cache"
Information beyond just an AVI (Score:5, Informative)
It's all real imaging data, carefully stitched together and colorised (using real data again) - it's probably about as good results as they can possibly get. Titan's gone from being a strange, difficult-to-imagine world to being somewhere almost homely (near-Earth-like rolling hills and eroded valleys) - all thanks to this one little space probe...
CoralCache doesn't help (Score:5, Informative)
Alas, downloading the AVI from CoralCache doesn't really help you. When you grab the AVI via the cache, it sends you to the original site (one presumes they don't cache movie files):
Maybe it would help if I posted the link to Google video's copy [google.com]. I think it's the same.
Re:Corrupt? (Score:3, Informative)
Mirror copies (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.mars.asu.edu/~gorelick/Descent_On_Tita
http://www.mars.asu.edu/~gorelick/Huygens_Movie.m
And another version with more information
http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/archive/PIA08117