Cassini spacecraft readies for dive into Saturn moon Enceladus's icy spray
Spacecraft will come within 48 kilometres of Enceladus's south pole
The Cassini spacecraft is about to get an icy shower as it orbits Saturn.
On Wednesday, Cassini will storm through a jet of water vapour and frozen particles erupting from the south pole of Enceladus, one of Saturn's many moons. The spacecraft will zoom within 48 kilometres of the moon's south pole, providing the best sampling yet of its underground ocean.
Cassini will be travelling 30,600 kilometres per hour, so it should take an instant to penetrate the plume.
A global liquid ocean is believed to exist beneath the frozen crust of 480-kilometre-wide Enceladus. Wednesday's dive will be the deepest one yet through one of its plumes.
Launched in 1997, Cassini isn't equipped to detect life. But scientists hope Wednesday's flyby will shed light on the potential habitability of Enceladus' ocean.