Preface.- Chapter 1 Overview.- Chapter 2 Review of Knowledge Prior to the Cassini-Huygens Mission and Concurrent Research.- Chapter 3 Origin of the Saturn System.- Chapter 4 The Interior of Saturn.- Chapter 5 Saturn: Composition and Chemistry.- Chapter 6 Saturn Atmospheric Structure and Dynamics.- Chapter 7 Clouds and Aerosols in Saturn's Atmosphere.- Chapter 8 Upper Atmosphere and Ionosphere of Saturn.- Chapter 9 Saturn's Magnetospheric Composition.- Chapter 10 The Dynamics of Saturn's Magnetosphere.- Chapter 11 Fundamental Plasma Processes in Saturn's Magnetosphere.- Chapter 12 Auroral Processes.- Chapter 13 The Structure of Saturn's Rings.- Chapter 14 Dynamics of Saturn's Dense Rings.- Chapter 15 Ring Particle Composition and Size Distribution.- Chapter 16 Diffuse Rings.- Chapter 17 Origin and Evolution of Saturn's Ring System.- Chapter 18 The Thermal Evolution and Internal Structure of Saturn's Mid-sized Satellites.- Chapter 19 Icy Satellites of Saturn: Impact Cratering and Age Determination.- Chapter 20 Icy Satellites: Geological Evolution and Surface Processes.- Chapter 21 Enceladus: An Active Cyrovolcanic Satellite.- Chapter 22 The Cassini Extended Mission.- Chapter 23 Saturn's Exploration Beyond Cassini-Huygens.- Chapter 24 Cartographic Mapping of the Icy Satellites using ISS and VIMS.- Appendix.
About the Author: Michele Dougherty, Cassini Saturn Orbiter (NASA/ESA) - Acting Principal Investigator (PI) for magnetometer instrument.
Dr. Esposito the principal investigator of the Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph (UVIS) experiment on the Cassini space mission to Saturn. He was chair of the Voyager Rings Working Group. As a member of the Pioneer Saturn imaging team, he discovered Saturn's F ring. He has been a participant in numerous US, Russian and European space missions and used the Hubble Space Telescope for its first observations of the planet Venus. He was awarded the Harold C. Urey Prize from the American Astronomical Society, The NASA Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement, and the Richtmyer Lecture Award from the American Association of Physics Teachers and the American Physical Society.
Dr. Esposito has written his Ph.D dissertation, numerous scientific publications, scholarly reviews on the topic of planetary rings as well as the Cambridge University Press book Planetary Rings. Along with his students and colleagues he continues to actively research the nature and history of planetary rings at the University of Colorado, where he has been since 1977. He is now Professor of Astrophysical and Planetary Sciences and a member of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP).
He has been an officer of the Division for Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society and of the Committee for Space Research (COSPAR) of the International Council of Scientific Unions. He was chair of the National Academy of Sciences Committee on Planetary and Lunar Exploration (COMPLEX). He is a member of American Astronomical Society, American Geophysical Union and International Astronomical Union.
Dr. Stamatios (Tom) Krimigis has been at APL since 1968, after earning his B. Physics from the University of Minnesota (1961), and his M.S. (1963) and Ph.D. (1965) in Physics from the University of Iowa and serving as Assistant Professor of Physics and Astronomy there. He became Supervisor of Space Physics and Instrumentation in the Space Department, Chief Scientist in 1980, Department Head in 1991, and Emeritus Head in 2004. He is Principal Investigator on several NASA spacecraft, including Voyagers 1 and 2 to the Outer Planets and the Voyager Interstellar Mission, and the Cassini mission to Saturn and Titan. He has designed and built instruments that have flown to seven of the nine planets, and hopes to complete the set with his participation in the MESSENGER mission to Mercury and New Horizons mission to Pluto. He has published more than 370 papers in journals and books on the physics of the sun, interplanetary medium, planetary magnetospheres, and the heliosphere. He is recipient of NASA's Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal twice, is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, American Geophysical Union, and American Association for the Advancement of Science, recipient of COSPAR's Space Science Award in 2002, a recipient of the Basic Sciences Award of the International Academy of Astronautics where he serves on the Board of Trustees, and was elected recently to the newly established chair of "Science of Space" of the Academy of Athens.