Posted on 12/23/2004 5:10:31 AM PST by kidd
The highlights of the first year of the Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn can be broken into two chapters: first, the arrival of the Cassini orbiter at Saturn in June, and second, the release of the Huygens probe on Dec. 24, 2004, on a path toward Titan.
The Huygens probe, built and managed by the European Space Agency (ESA), is bolted to Cassini and fed electrical power through an umbilical cable. It has been riding along during the nearly seven-year journey to Saturn largely in a "sleep" mode, awakened every six months for three-hour instrument and engineering checkups. In three days, it will be cut loose from its mother ship and will coast toward Saturn's moon Titan, arriving on Jan. 14, 2005.
"As partners with ESA, one of our obligations was to carry the Huygens probe to Saturn and drop it off at Titan," said Robert T. Mitchell, Cassini program manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "We've done the first part, and on Christmas Eve we will release Huygens and tension-loaded springs will gently push it away from Cassini onto a ballistic free-fall path to Titan."
Once freed from Cassini, the Huygens probe will remain dormant until the onboard timer wakes it up shortly before the probe reaches Titan's upper atmosphere on Jan. 14. Then it will begin a dramatic plunge through Titan's murky atmosphere, tasting the chemical makeup and composition as it descends to touch down on its surface. The data gathered during this 2-1/2 hour descent will be transmitted from the probe to the Cassini orbiter. Afterward, Cassini will point its antenna to Earth and relay the data through NASA's Deep Space Network to JPL and on to ESA's Space Operations Center in Darmstadt, Germany, which serves as the operations center for the Huygens probe mission. From this control center, ESA engineers will be tracking the probe and scientists will be standing by to process the data from the probe's six instruments.
Currently, both the orbiter and the probe are on an impact trajectory with Titan. This is the only way to ensure that Cassini delivers the probe in the right location. A confirmation of successful release is expected to be received from NASA's Deep Space Network tracking stations at Madrid, Spain and Goldstone, Calif., shortly before 8:00 p.m. PST on Dec. 24. A team of JPL engineers and ESA mission managers will be monitoring spacecraft activities at JPL during the release phase of the mission.
On Dec. 27, the Cassini orbiter will perform a deflection maneuver to keep it from following Huygens into Titan's atmosphere. This maneuver will also establish the required geometry between the probe and the orbiter for radio communications during the probe descent.
Two of the instruments on ESA's Huygens probe, the descent imager and spectral radiometer camera and the gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer, are contributions from NASA and American academia.
The imaging camera will take advantage of the Huygens probe's rotation, using two imagers to observe the surface of Titan during the late stages of descent for a view of the regions around the impact site. A side-looking imager will view the horizon and the underside of any cloud deck. More than just a camera, the instrument is designed to measure concentrations of argon and methane in the atmosphere and determine the size and density of particles. The instrument will also determine if the local surface is a solid or liquid, and if solid, its topography. The principal investigator is Dr. Martin G. Tomasko of the University of Arizona, Tucson, Ariz.
Although Titan's atmosphere is primarily nitrogen and methane, scientists believe it contains many other gases that are present only in small amounts. These trace gases can reveal critical details about the origin and evolution of Titan's atmosphere. Because trace gases are rare, they are difficult or impossible to observe remotely, so direct measurements must be made.
The gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer instrument will sample gas directly from Titan's atmosphere as the Huygens probe descends by parachute. Data from the instrument will allow researchers to investigate the chemical composition, origin and evolution of the atmosphere of Titan. The instrument was designed and built by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., and is led by the principal investigator, Dr. Hasso Niemann.
Updates on the Huygens probe release will be available at: http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov and http://www.nasa.gov/cassini . The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Cassini mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington, D.C. JPL designed, developed and assembled the Cassini orbiter. The European Space Agency built and managed the development of the Huygens probe and is in charge of the probe operations. The Italian Space Agency provided the high-gain antenna, much of the radio system and elements of several of Cassini's science instruments.
This artist's conception of the Cassini orbiter shows the Huygens probe separating to enter Titan's atmosphere. After separation, the probe drifts for about three weeks until reaching its destination, Titan. Equipped with a variety of scientific sensors, the Huygens probe will spend 2-2.5 hours descending through Titan's dense, murky atmosphere of nitrogen and carbon-based molecules, beaming its findings to the distant Cassini orbiter overhead. The probe could continue to relay information for up to 30 minutes after it lands on Titan's frigid surface, after which the orbiter passes beneath the horizon as seen from the probe.
Wouldn't that be fun?
Already posted here. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1307192/posts
LOL!
I'll be happy with any images. ESA spacecraft have a relatively low success rate.
Hopefully , it won't turn into 'V-ger' and come back looking for the 'creator'.
I have a feeling a lot of people around here will be rooting for it to fail merely because it's European.
ESA space probes don't seem to have a low success rate at all. May have a higher success rate than NASA, really (The Beagle was NOT an ESA project; it was an odd British project done on a shoestring.)
You know what's really odd? The same people who had posted on this thread, had already posted the exact same messages on that thread!
I could almost hear the spooky strains of the theme from The Twilight Zone playing in my mind.
(steely)
I think that frequently the thread walls get a pinhole in them which acts as a window to the parallel world of exact duplicate threads. It is frightening.
LOL. Merry Christmas, Conspiracy Guy!
(steely)
Somehow I did not get this before.
By the way, if they have a higher success rate it is only because there are lees of them and until recently they have been less adventurous in scope and intent.
Up until SOHO a great many ESA missions were managed operationally in conjunction with the USA.
But they are starting to have more cutting edge projects. I really like Herchel (only about 12% American) and Gia (or what ever they are clling it now) which is all European. While it is fine to be a ESA booster, you should put it in perspective.
Many of the instruments on the Mars Rovers are European designed and built....
Merry Christmas to you and yours.
You say that like it's a bad thing.
There will be at least one on the next rover mission though maybe two.
There are not really verymany "instruments" on the rover missions, really.
What other instruments are Europeanon the Rovers?
I have a theory about that. :-}
Cassini ready to launch European probe to Saturn moon Titan
http://www.bakersfield.com/state_wire/story/5168202p-5206817c.html
The Associated Press
Posted: Thursday December 23rd, 2004, 6:35 PM
Last Updated: Thursday December 23rd, 2004, 6:35 PM
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - With a gentle shove on Christmas Eve, the Cassini spacecraft will launch the European Space Agency's Huygens probe on a course that should send it plunging into the atmosphere of Saturn's big moon Titan.
The probe must be released precisely on course because it has no means of maneuvering and will remain dormant until a timer wakes it up for entry into Titan's hazy hydrocarbon-laced atmosphere and a parachute descent to the surface on Jan. 14.
Confirmation of a successful release should be received by NASA's Deep Space Network antennas in Spain and Goldstone, Calif., just before 8 p.m. PST Friday, Jet Propulsion Laboratory said.
The $3.3 billion Cassini-Huygens mission, a project of NASA, ESA and the Italian space agency, was launched on Oct. 15, 1997, from Cape Canaveral, Fla., to study Saturn, its spectacular rings and many moons.
During the nearly seven years Cassini took to reach the ringed planet, the attached probe was powered through an umbilical cable and awakened from sleep mode every six months for tests.
Cassini entered orbit around Saturn in June and has made several passes by Titan in preparation for the probe's release.
Friday evening, tension-loaded springs will push Huygens away from Cassini on a free-fall toward Titan.
On Dec. 27 Cassini will perform a course change to avoid following the probe into Titan.
Huygens is designed to make a 2 1/2-hour descent by parachute to the surface of the moon, which, according to some theories, could have lakes of methane.
Instruments aboard the probe will investigate the atmosphere's chemistry and cameras will try to record images of the surface. It's not known whether Cassini will drop into liquid or onto a hard surface, where it may operate for a few minutes.
As long as it is operating, Huygens will be transmitting data back to Cassini, which will later turn around to point its antenna at Earth and send the data to the Deep Space Network and on to ESA's Space Operations Center in Darmstadt, Germany.
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On the Net:
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov
http://www.nasa.gov/cassini
That was my theory.
Pretty cool stuff if true on wormholes, what a way to hitch a ride to another world. :)
Maybe they're conduits to parallel universes..It would explain where socks go when they teleport out of the laundry room.
We're just specks in a multi-planar cosmically-connected sandwich cookie. ;-)
Merry Christmas and Many Blessings in the New Year to you and Laura Earl & family!
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you. Everyday is a blessing and we give thanks.
Parallel threads scare me more than universes.
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