Although Cassini saw these features earlier in the mission, the spacecraft's current, special orbits are provide scientists an eagerly awaited opportunity to observe features with names like "straw" and "propellers."
The new images resolve details as small as 550 metres, which is on the scale of Earth's tallest buildings.
Cassini is now about halfway through its penultimate mission phase - 20 orbits that dive past the outer edge of the main ring system.
The ring-grazing orbits began last November and will continue until late April, when Cassini begins its grand finale.
For now, the veteran spacecraft is shooting past the outer edges of the rings every week, gathering some of its best images of the rings and moons. Already Cassini has sent back the closest-ever views of small moons Daphnis and Pandora.
Some of the structures seen in recent Cassini images have not been visible at this level of detail since the spacecraft arrived at Saturn in mid-2004.
At that time, fine details like straw and propellers - which are caused by clumping ring particles and small, embedded moonlets, respectively - had never been seen before.
Those precious few observations only looked out on the backlit side of the rings, and the team chose short exposure times to minimise smearing due to Cassini's fast motion as it vaulted over the ring plane. This resulted in images that were scientifically stunning, but somewhat dark and noisy.
In contrast, the close views Cassini has begun capturing in its ring-grazing orbits are taking in both the backlit and sunlit side of the rings.
"As the person who planned those initial orbit-insertion ring images - which remained our most detailed views of the rings for the past 13 years - I am taken aback by how vastly improved are the details in this new collection," said Cassini Imaging Team Lead Carolyn Porco, of Space Science Institute in the US.
"These close views represent the opening of an entirely new window onto Saturn's rings, and over the next few months we look forward to even more exciting data as we train our cameras on other parts of the rings closer to the planet," said Matthew Tiscareno, a Cassini scientist at the SETI Institute, Mountain View, California.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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