Back in July, the
NASA's
The image was taken from nearly 900 million miles away. In the image, Saturn is backlit from the sun, which illuminates its rings. The spacecraft usually can't face this way, because the sun's rays would damage its cameras.
Cassini took the image from about 746,000 miles (1.2 million kilometers) away from Saturn. Each pixel that makes up the planet is about 45 miles (72 kilometers) wide.
The resulting huge image was stitched together from 141 smaller shots. It took about four hours to take all the images. According to NASA, the image below spans about 404,880 miles (651,591 kilometers) across.
See (and zoom in on) the original image at NASA, where they've also provided more information about the planet's rings.What looks like a non-existent speck in the original image can be blown up to see the few pixels that are the Earth. The pixels coming from the planets have actually been brightened by a factor of 8 1/2 compared to Saturn's luminance to make them more visible:
Actually, if you zoom in enough and look really closely, it looks like you can see the individual pixel that is the light reflected off the