Cassini–Huygens is
a joint NASA
/ESA
/ASI robotic spacecraft mission currently
studying the planet Saturn and its many
natural
satellites. The
spacecraft
consists of two main elements: the NASA-designed and -constructed
Cassini orbiter, named for the Italian-French astronomer
Giovanni Domenico Cassini,
and the ESA-developed
Huygens
probe, named for the Dutch astronomer, mathematician and
physicist
Christiaan Huygens. The
complete
Cassini space probe was launched on October 15,
1997, and after a long interplanetary voyage, it entered into orbit
around Saturn on July 1, 2004. On December 25, 2004, the
Huygens probe was separated from the orbiter at
approximately 02:00
UTC.
Then, it reached Saturn's moon
Titan on
January 14, 2005, when it made a descent into Titan's atmosphere,
and downwards to the surface, radioing scientific information back
to the Earth by
telemetry. On April 18,
2008, NASA announced a two-year extension of the funding for ground
operations of this mission, at which point it was renamed to
Cassini Equinox Mission.
Cassini is the
first space probe to orbit the planet Saturn and the fourth one to
visit Saturn.
Hundreds of scientists and engineers from 16 European countries and
of the United States make up the team responsible for designing,
building, flying and collecting data from the Cassini orbiter and
Huygens probe.
The mission is managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory
, where the orbiter was designed and
assembled. Development of the Huygens Titan probe was
managed by the European Space Research and Technology
Centre
, whose prime contractor for the probe was the
Alcatel company in France. Equipment
and instruments for the probe were supplied from many countries.
The
Italian Space Agency (ASI)
provided the
Cassini probe's high-gain radio
antenna, and a compact and lightweight
radar, which acts in multipurpose as a
synthetic aperture radar, a
radar altimeter, and a
radiometer.
Objectives

Animation of the satellite
Cassini has seven primary objectives:
- Determine the three-dimensional structure and dynamic behavior
of the rings of Saturn
- Determine the composition of the satellite surfaces and the geological history of each object
- Determine the nature and origin of the dark material on
Iapetus's leading hemisphere
- Measure the three-dimensional structure and dynamic behavior of
the magnetosphere
- Study the dynamic behavior of Saturn's atmosphere at cloud level
- Study the time variability of Titan's clouds and hazes
- Characterize Titan's surface on a regional scale
The
Cassini–Huygens spacecraft was launched on October 15,
1997, from Cape Canaveral Air Force
Station
's Space Launch Complex 40
using a U.S.
Air Force Titan
IVB/
Centaur rocket. The
complete launcher was made up of a two-stage
Titan IV booster
rocket, two strap-on solid
rocket
motors, the Centaur upper stage, and a payload enclosure, or
fairing.
The total cost of this scientific exploration mission is about
US$3.26
billion, including $1.4 billion for
pre-launch development, $704
million for
mission operations, $54 million for tracking and $422 million for
the launch vehicle. The United States contributed $2.6 billion, the
ESA $500 million, and the ASI $160 million.
The nominal end of the mission was scheduled for 2008, but given
the excellent condition of the
Cassini orbiter at that
time, an extension of the mission until 2010 has been approved. It
is possible that funding will be granted for additional
extensions.
History
Cassini–Huygens's origins date to
1982, when the European
Science Foundation and the American National Academy of Sciences
formed a working group
to investigate future cooperative missions. Two European
scientists suggested a paired Saturn Orbiter and Titan Probe as a
possible joint mission. In 1983, NASA's
Solar System Exploration
Committee recommended the same Orbiter and Probe pair as a core
NASA project.
NASA and the European Space Agency
(ESA) performed a joint study of the potential
mission from 1984 to 1985. ESA continued with its own study
in 1986, while the American astronaut
Sally
Ride, in her influential 1987 report "
NASA Leadership and America's Future in
Space," also examined and approved of the
Cassini
mission.
While Ride's report described the Saturn orbiter and probe as a
NASA solo mission, in 1988 the Associate Administrator for Space
Science and Applications of NASA Len Fisk returned to the idea of a
joint NASA and ESA mission. He wrote to his counterpart at the ESA,
Roger Bonnet, strongly suggesting that the ESA choose the
Cassini mission from the three candidates at hand and
promising that NASA would commit to the mission as soon as the ESA
did.
At the time, NASA was becoming more sensitive to the strain that
had developed between the American and European space programs as a
result of European perceptions that NASA had not treated it like an
equal during previous collaborations. NASA officials and advisers
involved in promoting and planning
Cassini–Huygens
attempted to correct this trend by stressing their desire to evenly
share any scientific and technology benefits resulting from the
mission.
In part, this newfound spirit of cooperation
with Europe was driven by a sense of competition with the Soviet Union
, which had begun to cooperate more closely with
Europe as the ESA drew further away from NASA.
The collaboration not only improved relations between the two space
programs but also helped
Cassini–Huygens survive
congressional budget cuts in the United States.
Cassini–Huygens came under fire politically in both 1992
and 1994, but NASA successfully persuaded the
U.S. Congress that it would be
unwise to halt the project after the ESA had already poured funds
into development because frustration on broken space exploration
promises might spill over into other areas of foreign relations.
The project proceeded politically smoothly after 1994, although, as
noted below, citizens' groups concerned about its potential
environmental impact attempted to derail it through protests and
lawsuits until and past its 1997 launch.
Spacecraft design

Cassini assembly
The spacecraft was originally planned to be the second three-axis
stabilized,
RTG-powered
Mariner Mark II, a class of spacecraft
developed for missions beyond the orbit of
Mars.
Cassini was being developed together
with the
Comet
Rendezvous Asteroid Flyby (
CRAF) spacecraft, but
various budget cuts and rescopings of the project forced NASA to
terminate
CRAF development in order to save
Cassini. As a result, the
Cassini spacecraft
became a more specialized design, canceling the implementation of
the Mariner Mark II series.
The spacecraft, including the orbiter and the probe, is the largest
and most complex
interplanetary
spacecraft built to date. The orbiter has a mass of , the probe .
With the launch vehicle adapter and of propellants at launch, the
spacecraft had a mass of about .
Only the two Phobos spacecraft sent to Mars by the Soviet Union
were heavier. The
Cassini
spacecraft is more than high and more than wide. The complexity of
the spacecraft is necessitated both by its
trajectory (flight path) to Saturn, and by the
ambitious program of scientific observations once the spacecraft
reaches its destination. It functions with 1,630 interconnected
electronic components, 22,000
wire connections, and over of cabling.
Now that the
Cassini probe is orbiting Saturn, it is
between 8.2 and 10.2
astronomical
units from the
Earth. Because of this, it
takes between 68 to 84 minutes for radio signals to
travel from Earth to the spacecraft, and
vice-versa. Thus, ground controllers cannot give "real-time"
instructions to the spacecraft, either for day-to-day operations,
or in cases of unexpected events. Even if they responded
immediately after becoming aware of a problem, nearly three hours
will have passed before the satellite receives a response.
Instruments
Cassini's instrumentation consists of: a synthetic
aperture
radar mapper, a
charge-coupled device imaging system,
a visible/
infrared mapping
spectrometer, a composite infrared
spectrometer, a
cosmic dust analyzer, a
radio and
plasma wave experiment, a plasma
spectrometer, an
ultraviolet imaging
spectrograph, a
magnetospheric imaging
instrument, a
magnetometer and an
ion/neutral
mass
spectrometer. Telemetry from the communications
antenna and other special transmitters
(an
S-band transmitter and a dual-frequency
Ka-band system) will also be used
to make observations of the atmospheres of Titan and Saturn and to
measure the
gravity fields of the planet and
its satellites.
- Cassini Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS): The CAPS is a
direct sensing instrument that measures the energy and electrical
charge of particles that the instrument encounters, (the amount of
electrons and protons in the particle). CAPS will measure the
molecules originating from Saturn's ionosphere and also determine
the configuration of Saturn's magnetic field. CAPS will also
investigate plasma in these areas
as well as the solar wind within Saturn's magnetosphere.
- Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA): The CDA is a direct sensing
instrument that measures the size, speed, and direction of tiny
dust grains near Saturn. Some of these particles are orbiting
Saturn, while others may come from other star systems. The CDA on
the orbiter is designed to learn more about these mysterious
particles, the materials in other celestial bodies and potentially
about the origins of the universe.
- Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS): The CIRS is a remote
sensing instrument that measures the infrared
waves coming from objects to learn about their temperatures,
thermal properties, and compositions. Throughout the
Cassini–Huygens mission, the CIRS will measure infrared emissions
from atmospheres, rings and surfaces in the vast Saturn system. It
will map the atmosphere of Saturn in three dimensions to determine
temperature and pressure profiles with altitude, gas composition,
and the distribution of aerosols and
clouds. It will also measure thermal characteristics and the
composition of satellite surfaces and rings.
- Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer (INMS): The INMS is a direct
sensing instrument that analyzes charged particles (like protons
and heavier ions) and neutral particles (like atoms) near Titan and
Saturn to learn more about their atmospheres. INMS is intended also
to measure the positive ion and neutral environments of Saturn's
icy satellites and rings.
- Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS): The ISS is a remote sensing
instrument that captures most images in visible light, and also some infrared images and ultraviolet images. The ISS has taken hundreds
of thousands of images of Saturn, its rings, and its moons, for
return to the Earth by radio telemetry.
The ISS has a wide-angle camera (WAC) that
takes pictures of large areas, and a narrow-angle camera (NAC) that
takes pictures of small areas in fine detail. Each of these cameras
uses a sensitive charge-coupled device (CCD) as its electromagnetic wave detector. Each CCD has
a 1,024 square array of pixels, 12 μm on a side. Both cameras allow for many data
collection modes, including on-chip data compression. Both cameras
are fitted with spectral filters that rotate on a wheel—to view
different bands within the electromagnetic spectrum ranging from
0.2 to 1.1 μm.
- Dual Technique
Magnetometer (MAG): The MAG is a direct sensing instrument that
measures the strength and direction of the magnetic field around
Saturn. The magnetic fields are generated partly by the intensely
hot molten core at Saturn's center. Measuring the magnetic field is
one of the ways to probe the core, even though it is far too hot
and deep to visit. MAG aims to develop a three-dimensional model of
Saturn's magnetosphere, and determine the magnetic state of Titan
and its atmosphere, and the icy satellites and their role in the
magnetosphere of Saturn.
- Magnetospheric Imaging Instrument (MIMI): The MIMI is both a
direct and remote sensing instrument that produces images and other
data about the particles trapped in Saturn's huge magnetic field,
or magnetosphere. This information will be used to study the
overall configuration and dynamics of the magnetosphere and its
interactions with the solar wind, Saturn's atmosphere, Titan,
rings, and icy satellites.
- Radar: The onboard radar is a remote
active and remote passive sensing instrument that will produce maps
of Titan's surface. It measures the height of surface objects (like
mountains and canyons) by sending radio signals that bounce off
Titan's surface and timing their return. Radio waves can penetrate
the thick veil of haze surrounding Titan. The radar will listen for
radio waves that Saturn or its moons may be producing.
- Radio and Plasma Wave Science instrument (RPWS): The RPWS is a
direct and remote sensing instrument that receives and measures
radio signals coming from Saturn, including the radio waves given
off by the interaction of the solar wind with Saturn and Titan.
RPWS is to measure the electric and magnetic wave fields in the
interplanetary medium and planetary magnetospheres. It will also
determine the electron density and temperature near Titan and in
some regions of Saturn's magnetosphere. RPWS studies the
configuration of Saturn's magnetic field and its relationship to
Saturn Kilometric Radiation (SKR), as well as monitoring and
mapping Saturn's ionosphere, plasma, and lightning from Saturn's
(and possibly Titan's) atmosphere.
- Radio Science Subsystem
(RSS): The RSS is a remote sensing instrument that uses radio
antennas on Earth to observe the way radio signals from the
spacecraft change as they are sent through objects, such as Titan's
atmosphere or Saturn's rings, or even behind the Sun. The RSS also studies the compositions, pressures
and temperatures of atmospheres and ionospheres, radial structure
and particle size distribution within rings, body and system masses
and gravitational waves. The
instrument uses the spacecraft X-band communication link as well as
S-band downlink and Ka-band uplink and downlink.
- Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph (UVIS): The UVIS is a remote
sensing instrument that captures images of the ultraviolet light
reflected off an object, such as the clouds of Saturn and/or its
rings, to learn more about their structure and composition.
Designed to measure ultraviolet light over wavelengths from 55.8 to
190 nm, this instrument is also a valuable tool to help
determine the composition, distribution, aerosol particle content
and temperatures of their atmospheres. Unlike other types of
spectrometer, this sensitive instrument can take both spectral and
spatial readings. It is particularly adept at determining the
composition of gases. Spatial observations take a wide-by-narrow
view, only one pixel tall and 64 pixels
across. The spectral dimension is 1,024 pixels per spatial pixel.
Also, it can take many images that create movies of the ways in
which this material is moved around by other forces.
- Visible and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS): The VIMS is a
remote sensing instrument that captures images using visible and
infrared light to learn more about the composition of moon
surfaces, the rings, and the atmospheres of Saturn and Titan. It is
made up of two cameras in one: one used to measure visible light,
the other infrared. VIMS measures reflected and emitted radiation
from atmospheres, rings and surfaces over wavelengths from 350 to
5100 nm, to help determine their compositions, temperatures
and structures. It also observes the sunlight and starlight that
passes through the rings to learn more about their structure.
Scientists plan to use VIMS for long-term studies of cloud movement
and morphology in the Saturn system, to determine Saturn's weather
patterns.
Plutonium power source
Because of Saturn's distance from the sun,
solar arrays were not feasible as power sources
for this space probe. To generate enough power, such arrays would
have been too large and too heavy. Instead, the
Cassini
orbiter is powered by three
radioisotope
thermoelectric generators (RTGs), which use heat from the
natural decay of
plutonium-238 (in the
form of plutonium dioxide) to generate direct current electricity
via
thermocouples. The RTGs on the
Cassini mission have the same design as those used on the
Galileo and
Ulysses space probes, and they were
designed to have very long operational lifetimes. At the end of the
nominal 11-year Cassini mission, they will still be able to produce
600 to 700
watts of electrical power.
[Incidentally, one of the spare RTGs for the
Cassini
mission was used to power the
New
Horizons mission to
Pluto and the
Kuiper Belt, which was designed and launched
later on.
To gain interplanetary
momentum while
already in flight, the trajectory of the
Cassini mission
included several
gravitational
slingshot maneuvers: two fly-by passes of
Venus, one more of the
Earth, and
then one of the planet
Jupiter. The
terrestrial fly-by was the final instance when the
Cassini
space probe posed any conceivable danger at all to human beings.
This occurred successfully, with hundreds of miles to spare, on
August 18, 1999. Had there been any malfunction that caused the
Cassini space probe to collide with the Earth, NASA's
complete environmental impact study estimated that, in the worst
case (with an acute angle of entry in which
Cassini would
gradually burn up), a significant fraction of the plutonium-238
inside the RTGs would have been dispersed into the Earth's
atmosphere, but the chances of that happening were nearly
ten million to one.
The primary mission that had been alloted for
Cassini
ended on July 30, 2008. However, given the excellent condition of
the orbiter, a two-year mission extension had already been
approved, and a second extension faces a good chance. NASA is
considering and studying the ending of the
Cassini mission
in 2012. Unlike the
Galileo
spacecraft, which was disposed of into the Jovian atmosphere to
be disintegrated and incinerated, a similar disposal of the
Cassini orbiter might cause a collision with large object
within the rings of Saturn and make
Cassini
uncontrollable. Rather that disposing of the orbiter in this way,
NASA is considering putting it into a high-altitude parking orbit,
and eventually flying it onto one of the smaller satellties of
Saturn, where the heat and radioactivity from the RTG would not be
a problem.
Huygens probe
The
Huygens probe, supplied by the European Space
Agency
(ESA) and named after the 17th century Dutch
astronomer who first discovered Titan,
Christiaan Huygens, scrutinized
the clouds, atmosphere, and surface of Saturn's moon Titan in its descent on January 15,
2005. It was designed to enter and brake in Titan's
atmosphere and parachute a fully instrumented robotic laboratory
down to the surface.
The probe system consisted of the probe itself which descended to
Titan, and the probe support equipment (PSE) which remained
attached to the orbiting spacecraft. The PSE includes electronics
that track the probe, recover the data gathered during its descent,
and process and deliver the data to the orbiter that transmits it
to Earth. The data was transmitted by a radio link between
Huygens and
Cassini provided by Probe Data Relay
Subsystem (PDRS). As the probe's mission could not be telecommanded
from Earth because of the great distance, it was automatically
managed by the Command Data Management Subsystem (CDMS). The PDRS
and CDMS were provided by the
Italian Space Agency (ASI).
Important events and discoveries
Venus and Earth fly-bys and the cruise to Jupiter
The
Cassini space probe performed two
gravitational-assist fly-by of
Venus on April 26, 1998, and June 24, 1999. These
fly-bys provided the space probe with enough momentum to travel all
the way out to the
asteroid belt. At
that point, the sun's gravity pulled the space probe back into the
inner solar system, where it made a gravitational-assist fly-by of
the Earth.
On August 18, 1999, at 03:28 UTC, the
Cassini craft made a
gravitational-assist flyby of the Earth. One hour and 20 minutes
before closest approach,
Cassini made the closest approach
to the Earth's Moon at 377,000 kilometers, and it took a series of
calibration photos.
On Jan. 23, 2000, the
Cassini space probe performed a
fly-by of the
asteroid 2685 Masursky at around 10:00 UTC. The
Cassini craft took photos in the period five to seven
hours before the fly-by at a distance of 1.6 million kilometers,
and a diameter of 15 to 20 km. was estimated for the
asteroid.
Jupiter flyby
Cassini made its closest approach to
Jupiter on December 30, 2000, and made many
scientific measurements. About 26,000 images of Jupiter were taken
during the months-long flyby. It produced the most detailed global
color portrait of Jupiter yet (see image at right), in which the
smallest visible features are approximately 60 km (40 miles)
across.
The
New Horizons mission to
Pluto captured more recent images of Jupiter, with a closest
approach on February 28, 2007.
A major finding of the flyby, announced on March 6, 2003, was of
Jupiter's atmospheric circulation. Dark "belts" alternate with
light "zones" in the atmosphere, and scientists had long considered
the zones, with their pale clouds, to be areas of upwelling air,
partly because many clouds on Earth form where air is rising. But
analysis of
Cassini imagery showed that individual storm
cells of upwelling bright-white clouds, too small to see from
Earth, pop up almost without exception in the dark belts.
According
to Anthony Del Genio of NASA
's Goddard
Institute for Space Studies
, "the belts must be the areas of net-rising
atmospheric motion on Jupiter, [so] the net motion in the zones has
to be sinking."
Other atmospheric observations included a swirling dark oval of
high atmospheric-haze, about the size of the
Great Red Spot, near Jupiter's north pole.
Infrared imagery revealed aspects of circulation near the poles,
with bands of globe-encircling winds, with adjacent bands moving in
opposite directions.
The same announcement also discussed the nature of Jupiter's
rings. Light scattering by particles
in the rings showed the particles were irregularly shaped (rather
than spherical) and likely originate as ejecta from micrometeorite
impacts on Jupiter's moons, probably
Metis and
Adrastea.
Tests of Einstein's Theory of General Relativity
On October 10, 2003, the
Cassini science team announced
the results of tests of
Einstein's
Theory of General
Relativity, which were done by using
radio waves that were transmitted from the
Cassini space probe.
The radio scientists measured a
frequency
shift in the radio waves to and from the spacecraft, while those
signals traveled close to the sun. According to the Theory of
General Relativity, a massive object like the sun causes space-time
to curve, and a beam of radio waves (or light, or any form of
electromagnetic radiation)
that passes by the sun has to travel farther because of the
curvature.
The extra distance that the radio waves traveled from the
Cassini craft, past the sun, to the Earth delays their
arrival. The amount of this time delay provides a sensitive test of
the calculated predictions of Einstein's Relativity Theory.
Although some measurable deviations from the values that are
calculated using the General Theory of Relativity are predicted by
some unusual cosmological models, none of these deviations were
found by this experiment. Previous tests using radio waves that
were transmitted by the
Viking and
Voyager space
probes were in agreement with the calculated values from General
Relativity to within an accuracy of one part in one thousand. The
more refined measurements from the
Cassini space probe
experiment improved this accuracy to about
one part in
50,000, with the measured data firmly supporting
Einstein's General Theory of Relativity.
New moons of Saturn
Using images taken by
Cassini, three new moons of
Saturn were discovered in 2004. They are very small
and were given the provisional names S/2004 S 1, S/2004 S 2 and
S/2004 S 5 before being named
Methone,
Pallene and
Polydeuces at the beginning of 2005.
On May 1, 2005, a new moon was discovered by
Cassini in
the
Keeler gap. It was given the
designation S/2005 S 1 before being named
Daphnis. The only other known moon inside
Saturn's ring system is
Pan.
A press release on February 3, 2009 shows yet another new moon
found by the Cassini Spacecraft. The moon is approximately 1/3 of a
mile long in the G-ring of the ring system of Saturn.
Phoebe flyby
On June 11, 2004,
Cassini flew by the moon
Phoebe. This was the first opportunity for
close-up studies of this moon since the
Voyager 2 flyby. It also was
Cassini's only possible flyby for Phoebe due to the
mechanics of the available orbits around Saturn.
First close up images were received on June 12, 2004, and mission
scientists immediately realized that the surface of Phoebe looks
different from asteroids visited by spacecraft. Parts of the
heavily cratered surfaces look very bright in those pictures, and
it is currently believed that a large amount of water ice exists
under its immediate surface.
Saturn rotation
In an announcement on June 28, 2004,
Cassini program
scientists described the measurement of the rotational period of
Saturn. Since there are no fixed features on
the surface that can be used to obtain this period, the repetition
of radio emissions was used. These new data agree with the latest
values measured from Earth, and constitute a puzzle to the
scientists. It turns out that the radio rotational period has
changed since it was first measured in 1980 by
Voyager, and that it is now 6
minutes longer. This doesn't indicate a change in the overall spin
of the planet, but is thought to be due to movement of the source
of the radio emissions to a different latitude, at which the
rotation rate is different.
Orbiting Saturn
On July 1, 2004, the spacecraft flew through the gap between the
F and G rings and achieved
orbit, after a seven year voyage. It is the first
spacecraft to ever orbit Saturn.
The Saturn Orbital Insertion (SOI) maneuver performed by
Cassini was complex, requiring the craft to orient its
High-Gain Antenna away from Earth and along its flight path, to
shield its instruments from particles in Saturn's rings. Once the
craft crossed the ring plane, it had to rotate again to point its
engine along its flight path, and then the engine fired to
decelerate the craft by 622 meters per second to allow Saturn to
capture it.
Cassini was captured by Saturn's gravity at
around 8:54 p.m.
Pacific Daylight
Time on June 30, 2004. During the maneuver
Cassini
passed within 20,000 km (13,000 miles) of Saturn's cloud
tops.
Titan flybys
Cassini had its first distant flyby of
Saturn's largest moon,
Titan, on July 2, 2004, only a day after orbit
insertion, when it approached to within of Titan and provided the
best look at the moon's surface to date. Images taken through
special filters (able to see through the moon's global haze) showed
south polar clouds thought to be composed of
methane and surface features with widely differing
brightness. On October 27, 2004, the spacecraft executed the first
of the 45 planned close flybys of Titan when it flew a mere 1,200
kilometers above the moon. Almost four
gigabits of data were collected and transmitted to
Earth, including the first
radar images of the
moon's haze-enshrouded surface. It revealed the surface of Titan
(at least the area covered by radar) to be relatively level, with
topography reaching no more than about 50 meters in altitude. The
flyby provided a remarkable increase in imaging resolution over
previous coverage. Images with up to 100 times better
resolution' were taken and are typical of
resolutions planned for subsequent Titan flybys. (Note that
"resolution" refers to the clarity and precision of pictures, and
that it has nothing to do with the overall size of the pictures in
square centimeters, as is very commonly erroneously stated.)
Huygens' encounter with Titan
Cassini released the
Huygens probe on December
25, 2004, by means of a spring. It entered the atmosphere of Titan
on January 14, 2005, and after a two-and-a-half-hour descent landed
on solid ground with no liquids in view. Although Cassini
successfully relayed 350 of the pictures that it received from
Huygens of its descent and landing site, a software error failed to
turn on one of the Cassini receivers and caused the loss of the
other 350 pictures.
Enceladus flybys
During the first two close flybys of the moon
Enceladus in 2005,
Cassini
discovered a "deflection" in the local magnetic field that is
characteristic for the existence of a thin but significant
atmosphere. Other measurements obtained at that time point to
ionized water vapor as being its main constituent.
Cassini
also observed water ice geysers erupting from the south pole of
Enceladus, which gives more credibility to the idea that Enceladus
is supplying the particles of Saturn's E ring. Mission scientists
hypothesize that there may be pockets of liquid water near the
surface of the moon that fuel the eruptions, making Enceladus one
of the few bodies in our solar system to contain liquid
water.
On March 12, 2008,
Cassini made a close fly-by of
Enceladus, getting within 50 km of the moon's surface.. The
spacecraft passed through the plumes extending from its southern
geysers, detecting water, carbon dioxide and various hydrocarbons
with its mass spectrometer, while also mapping surface features
that are at much higher temperature than their surroundings with
the infrared spectrometer.
Cassini was unable to collect
data with its cosmic dust analyzer due to an unknown software
malfunction.
On November 21 Cassini again made a fly by of Enceladus, this time
with a very different geometry, approaching within 1,600 kilometers
(1000 miles) of the surface. The Composit Infrared Spectrograph
(CIRS) instrument will make a map of thermal emissions from the
tiger stripe Baghdad Sulcus. This is the eighth flyby of Enceladus
and is also sometimes referred to as “E-8.” The data and images
returned will help to create the most-detailed-yet mosaic image of
the southern part of the moon's Saturn-facing hemisphere and a
contiguous thermal map of one of the intriguing "tiger stripe"
features, with the highest resolution to date.
Radio occultations of Saturn's rings
In May 2005,
Cassini began a series of
occultation experiments, to measure the
size-distribution of particles in
Saturn's rings, and measure the atmosphere
of Saturn itself. For over 4 months,
Cassini completed
orbits designed for this purpose. During these experiments,
Cassini flew behind the ring plane of Saturn, as seen from
Earth, and transmitted radio waves through the particles. The radio
signals were received on Earth, where the frequency, phase, and
power of the signal was analyzed to help determine the structure of
the rings.
Spoke phenomenon verified
In images captured September 5, 2005,
Cassini finally
detected spokes in Saturn's rings, hitherto seen only by the visual
observer Stephen James O'Meara in 1977 and then confirmed by the
Voyager space probes in the
early 1980s. The exact cause of the spokes is not yet understood.
Some hypothetical models predicted that the spokes would not be
visible again until 2007.
Lakes of Titan
Radar images obtained on July 21, 2006 appear to show lakes of
liquid hydrocarbon (such as
methane and
ethane) in
Titan's northern latitudes. This is the first discovery of
currently-existing lakes anywhere besides Earth. The lakes range in
size from about a kilometer to one which is one hundred kilometers
across.
On March
13, 2007, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory
announced that it found strong evidence of seas of
methane and ethane in the northern hemisphere of Titan.
At least
one of these is larger than any of the Great Lakes
in North America.
Saturn hurricane
In November 2006, scientists discovered a storm at the south pole
of Saturn with a distinct eyewall. This is characteristic of a
hurricane on Earth and had never been seen
on another planet before. Unlike a Terran hurricane, the storm
appears to be stationary at the pole. The storm is across, high
with winds blowing .
Iapetus flyby
On September 10, 2007,
Cassini completed its flyby of the
strange, two-toned, walnut-shaped moon,
Iapetus. Images were taken from above the
surface. As it was sending the images back to Earth, it was hit by
a
cosmic ray which forced it to
temporarily enter
safe mode .
All of the data from the flyby was recovered.
Mission extension
On April 15, 2008, Cassini received funding for a two-year extended
mission, currently underway. It consists of 60 more orbits of
Saturn, and includes 21 more
Titan flybys, seven of
Enceladus, six of Mimas, eight of Tethys,
and one targeted flyby each of
Dione,
Rhea, and
Helene. The extended mission began on July 1,
2008, and has since been renamed the Cassini Equinox Mission. A
proposal has been submitted to NASA for a second mission extension,
called the extended-extended mission or XXM. This would see Cassini
orbiting Saturn until its 2017 northern summer solstice, and end
with a fiery plunge into the planet, safely disposing of the
spacecraft without risk of biocontamination to the Saturnian
moons.
Trajectory

The initial gravitational-assist
trajectory of
Cassini–Huygens
The initial gravitational-assist trajectory of
Cassini–Huygens is the process whereby an insignificant
mass approaches a significant mass "from behind" and "steals" some
of its orbital momentum. The significant mass, usually a planet,
loses a very small proportion of its orbital momentum to the
insignificant mass, the space probe in this case. However, due to
the space probe's small mass, this momentum transfer gives it a
relatively large momentum increase in proportion to its initial
momentum, speeding up its travel through outer space.
The
Cassini–Huygens space probe performed two
gravitational assist fly-bys at Venus, one more fly-by at the
Earth, and a final fly-by at Jupiter.
.jpg/481px-Cassini_Tour_(hypothetical).jpg)
Simplified diagram which shows, in two
dimensions, the orbital motion of
Cassini–Huygens on and
after arrival at Saturn
Glossary
- AACS: Attitude and Articulation Control Subsystem
- ACS: Attitude Control Subsystem
- AFC: AACS Flight Computer
- ARWM: Articulated Reaction Wheel Mechanism
- ASI: Agenzia Spaziale Italiana, the Italian space agency
- BIU: bus interface unit
- CAM: Command Approval Meeting
- CDS: Command and Data Subsystem—Cassini computer that commands
and collects data from the instruments
- CICLOPS: Cassini Imaging Central Laboratory for Operations
- CIMS: Cassini Information Management System
- DCSS: Descent Control Subsystem
- DSCC: Deep Space Communications Center
- DSN: Deep Space Network (large antennas around the earth)
- DTSTART: Dead Time Start
- ELS: Electron Spectrometer (part of CAPS instrument)
- ERT: Earth-received time, UTC of an event
- ESA: European Space Agency
- ESOC: European Space Operations Centre
- FSW: flight software
- HGA: High Gain Antenna
- HMCS: Huygens Monitoring and Control System
- HPOC: Huygens Probe Operations Center
- IBS: Ion Beam Spectrometer (part of CAPS instrument)
- IEB: Instrument Expanded Blocks (instrument command
sequences)
- IMS: Ion Mass Spectrometer (part of CAPS instrument)
- ITL: Integrated Test Laboratory—spacecraft simulator
- IVP: Inertial Vector Propagator
- LGA: Low Gain Antenna
- NAC: Narrow Angle Camera
- NASA: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the United
States of America space agency
- OTM: Orbit Trim Maneuver
- PDRS: Probe Data Relay Subsystem
- PHSS: Probe Harness SubSystem
- POSW: Probe On-Board Software
- PPS: Power and Pyrotechnic Subsystem
- PRA: Probe Relay Antenna
- PSA: Probe Support Avionics
- PSIV: Preliminary Sequence Integration and Validation
- PSE: probe support equipment
- RCS: Reaction Control System
- RFS: Radio Frequency Subsystem
- RPX: ring plane crossing
- RWA: Reaction Wheel Assembly
- SCET: Spacecraft Event Time
- SCR: sequence change requests
- SKR: Saturn Kilometric Radiation
- SOI: Saturn Orbit Insertion (July 1, 2004)
- SOP: Science Operations Plan
- SSPS: Solid State Power Switch
- SSR: Solid State Recorder
- SSUP: Science and Sequence Update Process
- TLA: Thermal Louver Assemblies
- USO: UltraStable Oscillator)
- VRHU: Variable Radioisotope Heater Units
- WAC: Wide Angle Camera
See also
References
- NASA extends Saturn mission - CNN.com
- Cassini Orbiter Instruments
- Cassini-Huygens: Spacecraft-Safety
- http://www.ingenia.org.uk/ingenia/articles.aspx?Index=317 How
to Land on Titan, Ingenia, June 2005
- Cassini-Huygens: News-Press Releases-2003
- MSN.com
- JPL.NASA.GOV: News Releases
-
http://trs-new.jpl.nasa.gov/dspace/bitstream/2014/10563/1/02-2613.pdf
- Cassini-Huygens: News
- Cassini Spacecraft to Dive Into Water Plume of
Saturn Moon NASA.gov, March 10, 2008
- Cassini Tastes Organic Material at Saturn's Geyser
Moon NASA.gov, March 26, 2008
- [1]
- Catalog Page for PIA05380
- Cassini-Huygens: News
- Cassini-Huygens: News
- FOXNews.com - Cassini Probe Flies by Iapetus, Goes
Into Safe Mode - Science News | Science & Technology |
Technology News
- Cassini's proposed extended-extended mission
tour
Further reading
External links