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Cassini-Huygens spacecraft begins systematic exploration of
Saturn system
By Patrick Martin
26 July 2004
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The successful passage of the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft through
Saturns rings June 30-July 1 sets the stage for an unprecedented
four-year exploration of the second largest planet in the solar
system and its complex system of 31 moons, powerful magnetic field
and unique rings. On July 22, NASA released the first glorious
full-color image of the rings, taken as the spacecraft approached
them from below in late June (see http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/jpegMod/PIA05421_modest.jpg).
The Cassini-Huygens is the latest of the great unmanned planetary
missions launched by NASAand likely to be the last, given
the priorities set by the Clinton and now the Bush administration,
cutting spending and opting for a supposedly faster, better,
cheaper approach, scaling back the size and scientific ambitions
of space probes.
The spacecraft was launched on October 15, 1997, from Cape
Canaveral, as a joint mission between NASA, the European Space
Agency (ESA) and the Italian Space Agency.
Cassini is the main spacecraft, 22 feet high and 13 feet wide,
weighing six tons. Its purpose is to explore the Saturn system,
using 12 different instruments to measure the characteristics
of the planet, its dozens of moons and its rings.
Huygens is a smaller landing vehicle, equipped with six instruments
devised for a close-up inspection of Saturns largest moon,
Titan, the only satellite in the solar system with its own atmosphere.
Huygens will separate from Cassini on Christmas Day and rendezvous
with Titan in early January 2005, making the first-ever landing
on a moon of one of the four giant outer planets. The lander will
not survive long on the surface of Titan, which is believed to
consist of frozen rock partially covered by lakes of ethane, at
temperatures approaching minus 300 degrees Fahrenheit.
The $3.3 billion mission represents the most complex and far-reaching
effort at international collaboration in space. NASA built the
main Cassini spacecraft and ESA the Huygens lander. The 18 instrumentsspectrometers,
particle collectors and imaging systems using electromagnetic
frequencies ranging from ultraviolent to microwavewere built
by 17 different countries. The Italian Space Agency built the
high-gain antenna and other radio components that play the critical
role in transmitting data across the nearly 1 billion miles to
Earth.
The two spacecraft are named after scientists who played key
roles in the understanding of the Saturn system, which was originally
discovered by Galileo. Christiaan Huygens, the great Dutch astronomer
who discovered Titan, suggested the existence of rings around
the planet, to explain its fuzzy and changing image in the rudimentary
telescopes of the seventeenth century. Jean-Dominique Cassini,
a French-Italian astronomer, subsequently confirmed the existence
of the rings.
Three previous spacecraftPioneer 11, Voyager 1 and Voyager
2have passed through the Saturn system and collected data
that constitutes the bulk of what is now known about the planet.
Cassini is the first spacecraft to go into orbit around the giant
planet, making possible an enormous advance in scientific understanding,
not only of the planet itself, but of the whole class of giant
gas planets that have many of the characteristics of stars, though
much smaller. (Saturn, like many of the gas giants, radiates more
energy than it absorbs.)
Getting Cassini to Saturn was a complex and challenging operation.
The nearly seven-year trip began with the spacecraft taking a
path toward rather than away from the Sun, and using the gravitational
pull of several of the planets to bend its trajectory and boost
its speed to the point that it could reach the ringed planet.
Cassinis path took it from Earth to Venus, twice using
the gravity of Venus to increase its speed, then using the gravity
of Earth to accelerate it toward Jupiter, and finally using the
gravity of Jupiter to propel it toward Saturn. After a voyage
of 2.2 billion miles, Cassini entered the Saturn system traveling
at a speed of more than 49,000 miles per hour. The trip has taken
so long that 13 additional moons of Saturn have been discovered
between the time Cassini blasted off and the time it was in a
position to explore the Saturn system.
Cassinis main engines were silent for nearly four years,
since the last course correction. They were test-fired on June
6 as the spacecraft moved in to photograph Saturns most
distant moon, Phoebe. A rock 137 miles across, Phoebe is believed
to have originated in the Kuiper Belt, on the edge of the solar
system, rather than condensing from the disk of hot gas from which
Saturn and its other moons were formed. Phoebe is four times as
far from Saturn as any other moon, and it has a retrograde orbit,
meaning that it moves in the opposite direction from Saturns
own rotation and the orbit of the other moons.
According to Pasadenas Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL),
which is managing the mission, Cassini added more knowledge about
Phoebe than had been accumulated in the 100 years since the moon
was discovered. A key measurement showed that Phoebe is lighter
than rock but heavier than ice, similar to Neptune and its moon
Triton. Its surface contains water ice, carbon dioxide and primitive
organic chemicals, showing that the moon is an asteroid captured
by Saturns gravity, as once thought, because carbon dioxide
is not found in the asteroid belt.
The test firing was in preparation for the successful Saturn
Orbit Insertion, which took place June 30. On that day, the spacecraft
made its passage through Saturns rings, then fired its engines
in reverse for 96 minutes, using up much of its fuel. This maneuver
slowed it just enoughas it was accelerated by Saturns
enormous gravitational pullto allow it to enter the planets
orbit, instead of flashing by and out into space like the three
previous spacecraft to have visited Saturn.
The operation was extremely complicated. Eighty-five minutes
before the engine firing, the spacecraft was rotated so that its
antenna dish, normally pointed toward the Earth (i.e., behind
it), would face forward towards the rings, serving as a sort of
shield to catch particles of ice before they could hit and possibly
damage the spacecraft body.
Instructions for this maneuver and the subsequent engine burn
were uploaded into Cassinis memory last year, although final
commands were being uploaded as late as three days before the
orbit insertion. Because it takes an hour and 24 minutes for a
radio signal from Earth to reach Cassini, everything had to be
prepared in advance.
The result was success beyond even the most optimistic of expectations.
The spacecraft reached Saturns rings within seven miles
of the position initially projectedan astonishingly precise
result for a voyage of 2.2 billion miles. The rocket firing ended
within one second of the projected time, and the resultant braking
was so close to perfect that JPL could dispense with a secondary
course correction maneuver that was allowed in the original mission
planning.
Having settled into orbit around Saturn, Cassini then went
dark for seven days, as it passed behind the Sun, as seen
from Earth, and could not communicate. On July 12, it reemerged
and began transmitting data again. The spacecraft has already
made observations of five of Saturns major moons: Titan,
Rhea, Dione, Tethys and Iapetus.
Over the next four years, Cassini will orbit Saturn 76 times,
and 52 of those passes will include close approaches to various
moons, including Mimas, the moon closest to Saturn, and Enceladus,
which is believed to possess liquid water under its surface.
The most important target is Titan, 3,200 miles in diameter,
larger than Mercury, Pluto or the Earths moon. Its atmosphere
has high concentrations of organic molecules, and it is thought
to resemble the chemical composition of the early years of the
Earth itself, when life first developed. In addition to the Huygens
landing, Cassini will approach within 600 miles of the surface
of the planet on 45 separate passes, providing an unprecedented
opportunity for scientific study. The first such fly-by will take
place October 26.
On July 3, Cassini sent its first photos of Titan, taken from
a distance of 600,000 miles (about twice the distance from the
Earth to the Moon). These pictures were fuzzy because of the dense
haze of the moons atmosphere, but did not show the anticipated
oceans of liquid methane or ethane. Instead, spectroscopic analysis
showed large areas of nearly pure water ice, together with mixtures
of ice and hydrocarbons.
The spacecraft will spend 15 hours a day using its instruments
to carry out direct observations and saving the data on its recorder,
whose capacity is about the same as a music CD. Then Cassini will
transmit an average of 500 images back to Earth. This routine
will continue for the next four years in a program that has already
been worked out in detail, using the gravity of Saturn and Titan
to bend its orbit as required.
The Cassini-Huygens mission is a triumph of organized, planned
scientific endeavor. Initial preparations began 22 years ago,
and many of its scientists have devoted their entire careers to
the mission. At its peak, in 1995, two years before launch, 1,500
scientists and engineers at JPL worked on the mission either full-time
or part-time.
A unique feature of the mission is a DVD imprinted with the
digital representations of the actual written signatures of 616,400
people, as well as handprints and pawprints of people, dogs and
cats from 81 countries. The disc is placed in an aluminum box
to shield it from microscopic particles that the spacecraft has
encountered throughout its journey, especially in the passage
through Saturns rings.
See Also:
Intriguing new discoveries
on Mars
[24 March 2004]
Bush administration cancels
maintenance of Hubble Space Telescope
[13 March 2004]
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