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CASSINI SPACECRAFT |
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Cassini, a joint NASA and European Space Agency mission,
comprises two parts. The main part is an orbiter named Cassini, after
the Italian astronomer Giovanni Cassini who observed Saturn and its rings,
discovering the main gap in them (the Cassini Division) and four of the
planet's moons. The second is a probe, named Huygens after Christiaan
Huygens, Dutch astronomer and discoverer of Titan, Saturn's largest moon.
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The Cassini spacecraft was launched in 1997, and will arrive
at Saturn in 2004. The orbiter will spend four years surveying the planet
and its moons, during which time it will make 70 orbits of Saturn and
its satellites. Cassini will collect data on Saturn's magnetosphere, examine
the ring system and study the gas giant's composition and atmosphere.
Instruments on board Cassini will measure atomic particle density, mass,
electrical charge in the environment of the spacecraft, as well as dust
particles, plasma and radio waves. The flybys of the moons will provide
detailed new pictures of their surfaces, including Titan at wavelengths
which will 'see-through' the murky atmosphere. |
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Mysterious Titan was imaged by Voyager, but no details
of its surface were visible. Ever since there has been much speculation
as to what lies below the thick orange-colored atmosphere. In perhaps
the most eagerly waited part of the mission, Huygens, released by Cassini
22 days earlier, will descend to Titan's surface, its fall braked by a
three large parachutes. As it travels through the atmosphere Huygens will
make scientific measurements, collecting data on the nature and composition
of the atmosphere. The journey to the surface is expected to take about
two hours, if the probe survives the landing it is hoped it will be still
operable and return pictures of the icy surface. |
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Signals from Huygens will be directed toward the Cassini
Orbiter which will relay them to Earth. Each time the Cassini's own data
recorder reaches capacity, the spacecraft is programmed to orientate its
antenna to Earth, and transmit the information for reception through the
antennas of the Deep Space Network (DSN). Througout the mission Cassini
is expected to return daily several gigabytes of fresh science data. |
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