With the Cassini spacecraft orbiting Saturn and making frequent fly-bys of all the weird moons there, it's easy to post one incredible close-up after another. But sometimes, you have to take a step back and get some context, see the bigger picture. Cassini can do that, too. And when it does, the beauty and scale of the Saturn system is simply breathtaking:

[Click to encronosate.] This image shows, of course, the ringed planet itself, with the rings seen edge-on and their shadow cast across the planet's southern hemisphere cloud tops. But look to the left, just below the rings; see that half-lit disk? That's Enceladus, an icy moon of Saturn. It's about 500 km (310 miles) across, which may start to give you an idea of how much area this picture covers. Even though it's as big as my home state of Colorado, it's positively dwarfed by the looming presence of Saturn behind it... and we're not even seeing very much of the planet here! Saturn is over 120,000 km (75,000 miles) across, nine times the diameter of Earth. Saturn is big.

To pound this home, look even farther to the left of Enceladus. See that black speck? I've enlarged the picture and annotated it here; the arrow points to Epimetheus, a lumpy gray potato moon of Saturn. It's about 113 km (70 miles) long. That's small for a moon, perhaps, but on a human scale it's a huge rock, more than ten times the height of Mt. Everest. Yet it's a speck in this picture, easily missed if you didn't know it was there. But I guess that's not surprising; Cassini was 1.2 million km from Saturn when it took this shot, three times the distance from the Earth to the Moon! Sometimes people ask me, what's the one thing you wish people understood better about the Universe? And if I had to pick just one only, it would be this: scale. The Universe is huge, and we've barely dipped our toes into it.

Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute. Tip o' the meterstick to Carolyn Porco.

Related posts: - An icy Titanic encounter - Enceladus fires on Alderaan - Saturn weather forecast: rings, with light rain from Enceladus - Enceladus sprays anew!