Ghostly image of two of Saturn's many moons, courtesy of Cassini - Los Angeles Times
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Ghostly image of two of Saturn’s many moons, courtesy of Cassini

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Saturn may be best known for its iconic rings, but the giant planet is also host to more than 53 moons, each one a fascinating and distinct world of its own.

In the ghostly image above, captured by NASA’s Cassini mission, you can see two members of Saturn’s massive moon family -- Mimas and Pandora -- glowing brightly above Saturn’s smooth gray rings.

The large, round moon toward the top of the image is Mimas, the smallest of Saturn’s major moons. It is 246 miles across, and scientists believe it is made almost entirely of water ice.

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Photos: Stunning moons of the solar system

Cassini was approximately 690,000 miles away from Mimas when it took this image, but if you look closely you can still spot the enormous 80-mile wide crater that spreads over a large chunk of the moon’s surface. (It looks like a divot on the right side of the moon).

Beneath Mimas, you’ll see the oblong moon Pandora, which is just 52 miles across and shaped like a potato. Pandora’s strange shape is a result of the moon not having enough gravity to pull itself into a sphere, according to NASA scientists.

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You can’t see it in this image, but Pandora is coated in dust-sized ice material that covers even its craters.

Cassini was 731,000 miles from Pandora when this image was taken.

Earlier this month, Cassini’s hard-working cameras caught a glimpse of Earth as seen from 900 million miles away. Those images can make you feel small and insignificant, but in a kind of glorious way.

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