ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Carolyn Porco - Planetary scientist
As the leader of the Imaging Team on the Cassini mission to Saturn, Carolyn Porco interprets and shares the pictures coming back from this fascinating planet, its rings and its moons.

Why you should listen

Planetary scientist Carolyn Porco studies and interprets the photos from NASA space missions like the renowned Voyager mission to the outer solar system in the 1980s and the Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn. She leads a team of scientists from the US and Europe that has been analyzing the images Cassini has sent back since it left Earth in 1997. At Saturn, they have found new phenomena everywhere they've turned their cameras … in the planet’s atmosphere, within its rings and on the surfaces of its many moons. And they've produced spectacular images and animations of these marvels in the process.

Back in the early-1980s, while still working on her doctorate, Porco was drafted onto the Voyager imaging team to assist in crunching the mountains of data coming back from Voyager’s fly-by of Saturn. Her work on the planet's rings and their relation to its moons cemented her connection with Saturn. After Voyager had flown by Neptune and was nearing conclusion, she worked together with Carl Sagan in planning Voyager’s celebrated Pale Blue Dot picture of Earth.

Her ongoing work at the Cassini Imaging Central Laboratory for Operations (CICLOPs) has two goals: to process, interpret and archive Cassini’s images for other scientists, and to make sure the images -- in all their breathtaking poetry and mystery and sheer Save-Image-As-Desktop awesomeness -- connect with the general public. She is an advocate for the exploration and understanding of planetary space, and her frequent talks (as well as her "Captain's Log" memos on the CICLOPS website) speak to everyone, scientist and nonscientist alike. Her advocacy extends to Hollywood, where she was the character consultant on the 1997 movie “Contact,” and a consultant on the 2009 Paramount Pictures re-boot of “Star Trek.” In 2012, she was named one the 25 most influential people in space by TIME magazine.

Finally, in a twist on the Pale Blue Dot theme, it was she who conceived the idea to invite the people of the world to smile while Cassini imaged the Earth on July 19, 2013 in an event called “The Day the Earth Smiled.”

For more information: 

Solar System Portrait: Earth as 'Pale Blue Dot'

BBC: Saturn snapped as Earth smiled

The Atlantic: The Carl Sagan of Our Time Reprises the 'Pale Blue Dot' Photo of Earth

The Day the Earth Smiled: Image

Library of Congress: Portraits of the Solar System: Talking with Carolyn Porco About Carl Sagan  

More profile about the speaker
Carolyn Porco | Speaker | TED.com
TED2009

Carolyn Porco: Could a Saturn moon harbor life?

Carolyn Porco: Kan er geleefd worden op een maan van Saturnus?

Filmed:
1,054,733 views

Carolyn Porco deelt spannende nieuwe ontdekkingen uit de recente verkenning van een maan van Saturnus, Enceladus, door het Cassini ruimtevaartuig. Monsters die verzameld zijn uit de ijsgeisers van de maan suggereren dat er een oceaan onder het oppervlak zit dat leven mogelijk maakt.
- Planetary scientist
As the leader of the Imaging Team on the Cassini mission to Saturn, Carolyn Porco interprets and shares the pictures coming back from this fascinating planet, its rings and its moons. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

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Two yearsjaar agogeleden here at TEDTED
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Twee jaar geleden vertelde ik
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I reportedgerapporteerd that we had discoveredontdekt
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bij TED dat we
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at SaturnSaturnus, with the CassiniCassini SpacecraftRuimtevaartuig,
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naar Saturnus zijn geweest met het Cassini ruimtevaartuig.
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an anomalouslyanomalously warmwarm and geologicallyGeologisch gezien activeactief regionregio
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Naar een abnormaal warm en geologisch actief gebied
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at the southernzuidelijk tiptip of the smallklein SaturnineZwaarmoedig moonmaan
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op de zuidelijke top van een kleine maan van Saturnus.
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EnceladusEnceladus, seengezien here.
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Enceladus, hier te zien.
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This regionregio seengezien here for the first time
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Dit gebied werd hier voor het eerst getoond
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in the CassiniCassini imagebeeld takeningenomen in 2005. This is the southzuiden polarpolair regionregio,
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in de Cassini foto, gemaakt in 2005. Dit is het zuidpool gebied.
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with the famousberoemd tiger-stripetijger-streep fracturesfracturen crossingkruispunt the southzuiden polepool.
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Met de beroemde tijgerstreep scheuren over de zuidpool.
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And seengezien just recentlykort geleden in latelaat 2008,
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En recent gezien, in het najaar van 2008,
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here is that regionregio again,
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hier dat gebied nogmaals,
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now halfvoor de helft in darknessduisternis because the southernzuidelijk hemispherehalfrond
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nu half in duisternis doordat het zuidelijk halfrond
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is experiencingervaren the onsetbegin of AugustAugustus
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het begin van Augustus ervaart
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and eventuallytenslotte winterwinter.
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en uiteindelijk de winter.
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And I alsoook reportedgerapporteerd that we'dwij hadden madegemaakt this mind-blowinggeestverruimend discoveryontdekking --
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En ik heb ook gerapporteerd dat we ongelofelijke ontdekkingen hebben gedaan --
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this once-in-a-lifetimeOnce-in-a-Lifetime discoveryontdekking
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Deze unieke ontdekking
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of toweringtorenhoog jetsjets
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van torenhoge uitbarstingen
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eruptinguitbarstende from those fracturesfracturen at the southzuiden polepool,
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uit de scheuren van de zuidpool,
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consistingbestaande of tinyklein waterwater iceijs- crystalskristallen
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bestaand uit kleine ijskristallen,
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accompaniedbegeleid by waterwater vapordamp
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waterdamp
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and simpleeenvoudig organicbiologisch compoundsverbindingen like carbonkoolstof dioxidedioxide and methanemethaan.
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en simpele organische verbindingen zoals kooldioxide en methaan.
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And at that time two yearsjaar agogeleden
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En tijdens die periode twee jaar geleden
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I mentionedvermeld that we were speculatingspeculeren
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zei ik dat we verwachten
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that these jetsjets mightmacht in factfeit be geysersgeisers,
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dat deze uitbarstingen eigenlijk geisers zijn
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and eruptinguitbarstende from pocketspockets
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die vrijkomen uit inkepingen
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or chamberskamers of liquidvloeistof waterwater underneathonder the surfaceoppervlak,
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of kamers gevuld met vloeibaar water onder de oppervlakte.
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but we weren'twaren niet really sure.
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Maar we wisten het niet zeker.
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HoweverEchter, the implicationsimplicaties of those resultsuitslagen --
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Desondanks waren de implicaties van deze resultaten
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of a possiblemogelijk environmentmilieu withinbinnen this moonmaan
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van een mogelijk milieu op de maan
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that could supportondersteuning prebioticprebiotisch chemistrychemie,
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dat de grondbeginselen van leven ondersteund
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and perhapsmisschien life itselfzelf --
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en misschien van het leven zelf,
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were so excitingopwindend that, in the interveninginterventie two yearsjaar,
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dit was zo spannend dat we in de twee jaar ertussen
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we have focusedgefocust more on EnceladusEnceladus.
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meer gefocust waren op Enceladus.
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We'veWe hebben flowngevlogen the CassiniCassini SpacecraftRuimtevaartuig
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We zijn met het Cassini ruimtevaartuig
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by this moonmaan now severalverscheidene timestijden,
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meerdere keren naar deze maan gevlogen.
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flyingvliegend closerdichterbij and deeperdiepere into these jetsjets,
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Dichterbij en dieper in deze uitbarstingen vliegend,
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into the denserdichtere regionsRegio's of these jetsjets,
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in de gebieden met een hogere dichtheid,
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so that now we have come away with some
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zodat we nu met zeer exacte
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very precisenauwkeurig compositionalsamenstelling measurementsafmetingen.
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opgestelde metingen zijn gekomen.
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And we have foundgevonden
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En we hebben ontdekt
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that the organicbiologisch compoundsverbindingen comingkomt eraan from this moonmaan
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dat de organische onderdelen vanuit deze maan komen
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are in factfeit more complexcomplex than we previouslyeerder reportedgerapporteerd.
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en eigenlijk veel complexer zijn dan voorheen werd gedacht.
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While they're not aminoamino acidszuren,
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Hoewel het geen animozuren zijn,
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we're now findingbevinding things like
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vinden we nu dingen zoals
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propanepropaan and benzenebenzeen,
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propaan en benzeen,
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hydrogenwaterstof cyanidecyanide, and formaldehydeformaldehyde.
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cyanide in watervorm en methanal.
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And the tinyklein waterwater crystalskristallen here
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En de kleine waterkristallen hier
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now look for all the worldwereld-
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lijken nu voor de gehele wereld
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like they are frozenbevroren dropletsdruppels of saltyzoute waterwater,
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alsof het bevroren druppels zout water zijn.
02:21
whichwelke is a discoveryontdekking that suggestssuggereert
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Het is een ontdekking die suggereert
02:23
that not only do the jetsjets come from
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dat de uitbartstingen niet alleen uit
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pocketspockets of liquidvloeistof waterwater,
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inkepingen van vloeibaar water komen,
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but that that liquidvloeistof waterwater is in contactcontact with rockrots.
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maar dat het vloeibaar water ook in contact staat met stenen.
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And that is a circumstanceomstandigheid
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En dat is een omstandigheid
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that could supplylevering the chemicalchemisch energyenergie
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die voor de chemische energie kan zorgen
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and the chemicalchemisch compoundsverbindingen needednodig to sustainvolhouden life.
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en de chemische onderdelen die nodig zijn om duurzaam leven mogelijk te maken.
02:37
So we are very encouragedaangemoedigd by these resultsuitslagen.
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Dus zijn we sterk aangemoedigd door deze resultaten.
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And we are much more confidentzelfverzekerd now than we were two yearsjaar agogeleden
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En we zijn veel zelfverzekerder nu dan we twee jaar geleden waren,
02:43
that we mightmacht indeedinderdaad
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dat we daadwerkelijk
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have on this moonmaan, underonder the southzuiden polepool,
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op deze maan, onder de zuidpool
02:48
an environmentmilieu or a zonezone that is hospitablegastvrij to livingleven organismsorganismen.
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een milieu of zone aantreffen dat het huisvesten van levende organismen mogelijk maakt.
02:52
WhetherOf or not there are livingleven organismsorganismen there, of courseCursus,
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Of er al levende organismen zijn is natuurlijk
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is an entirelygeheel differentverschillend matterer toe doen.
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een heel ander verhaal.
02:57
And that will have to awaitwachten op the arrivalaankomst,
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En dat zal moeten wachten op de aankomst,
02:59
back at EnceladusEnceladus,
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terug op Enceladus,
03:02
of the spacecraftsruimtetuigen, hopefullyhopelijk some time in the nearin de buurt futuretoekomst,
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van de ruimtevaartuigen, hopelijk in de nabije toekomst,
03:05
specificallyspecifiek equippeduitgerust to addressadres that particularbijzonder questionvraag.
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die specifiek uitgerust zijn om deze specifieke vraag te beantwoorden.
03:09
But in the meantimeondertussen I invitenodig uit you to imaginestel je voor the day
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Maar in de tussentijd nodig ik jullie uit om een dag voor te stellen
03:12
when we mightmacht journeyreis to the SaturnineZwaarmoedig systemsysteem,
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wanneer we reizen naar het Saturnus systeem
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and visitbezoek the EnceladusEnceladus interplanetaryInterplanetaire geysergeiser parkpark,
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en het Enceladus interplanetaire geizerpark bezoeken,
03:19
just because we can.
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gewoon omdat we dat kunnen.
03:21
Thank you.
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Dank u.
03:23
(ApplauseApplaus)
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(Applaus)
Translated by Rick van der Pluijm
Reviewed by Erik Mulder

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Carolyn Porco - Planetary scientist
As the leader of the Imaging Team on the Cassini mission to Saturn, Carolyn Porco interprets and shares the pictures coming back from this fascinating planet, its rings and its moons.

Why you should listen

Planetary scientist Carolyn Porco studies and interprets the photos from NASA space missions like the renowned Voyager mission to the outer solar system in the 1980s and the Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn. She leads a team of scientists from the US and Europe that has been analyzing the images Cassini has sent back since it left Earth in 1997. At Saturn, they have found new phenomena everywhere they've turned their cameras … in the planet’s atmosphere, within its rings and on the surfaces of its many moons. And they've produced spectacular images and animations of these marvels in the process.

Back in the early-1980s, while still working on her doctorate, Porco was drafted onto the Voyager imaging team to assist in crunching the mountains of data coming back from Voyager’s fly-by of Saturn. Her work on the planet's rings and their relation to its moons cemented her connection with Saturn. After Voyager had flown by Neptune and was nearing conclusion, she worked together with Carl Sagan in planning Voyager’s celebrated Pale Blue Dot picture of Earth.

Her ongoing work at the Cassini Imaging Central Laboratory for Operations (CICLOPs) has two goals: to process, interpret and archive Cassini’s images for other scientists, and to make sure the images -- in all their breathtaking poetry and mystery and sheer Save-Image-As-Desktop awesomeness -- connect with the general public. She is an advocate for the exploration and understanding of planetary space, and her frequent talks (as well as her "Captain's Log" memos on the CICLOPS website) speak to everyone, scientist and nonscientist alike. Her advocacy extends to Hollywood, where she was the character consultant on the 1997 movie “Contact,” and a consultant on the 2009 Paramount Pictures re-boot of “Star Trek.” In 2012, she was named one the 25 most influential people in space by TIME magazine.

Finally, in a twist on the Pale Blue Dot theme, it was she who conceived the idea to invite the people of the world to smile while Cassini imaged the Earth on July 19, 2013 in an event called “The Day the Earth Smiled.”

For more information: 

Solar System Portrait: Earth as 'Pale Blue Dot'

BBC: Saturn snapped as Earth smiled

The Atlantic: The Carl Sagan of Our Time Reprises the 'Pale Blue Dot' Photo of Earth

The Day the Earth Smiled: Image

Library of Congress: Portraits of the Solar System: Talking with Carolyn Porco About Carl Sagan  

More profile about the speaker
Carolyn Porco | Speaker | TED.com

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