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- FACT SHEET: THE CASSINI MISSION
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- Circled by distinctive rings and attended by a coterie of a
- dozen and a half moons, Saturn has been called one of the most
- intriguing planetary realms in the solar system. Its largest
- moon, Titan, boasts organic chemistry that may hold clues to how
- life formed on the primitive Earth.
-
- Saturn and Titan will be the destination for the Cassini
- mission, a project under joint development by NASA, the European
- Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The U.S. portion of
- the mission is managed for NASA by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
-
- After arriving at the ringed planet, the Cassini orbiter
- will release a probe, called Huygens, which will descend to the
- surface of Titan. The Cassini orbiter will then continue on a
- mission of at least four years in orbit around Saturn.
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- MISSION PROFILE
-
- Launched in October 1997 on a Titan IV-Centaur rocket from
- Cape Canaveral, Florida, Cassini will first execute two gravity-
- assist flybys of Venus, then one each of the Earth and Jupiter to
- send it on to arrive at Saturn in June 2004.
-
- Upon reaching Saturn, Cassini will swing close to the planet
- -- to an altitude only one-sixth the diameter of Saturn itself --
- to begin the first of some five dozen orbits during the rest of
- its four-year mission.
-
- In late 2004, Cassini will release the European-built
- Huygens probe for its descent of up to two and a half hours
- through Titan's dense atmosphere. The instrument-laden probe
- will beam its findings to the Cassini orbiter to be stored and
- finally relayed to Earth.
-
- During the course of the Cassini orbiter's mission, it will
- execute some three dozen close flybys of particular bodies of
- interest -- including more than 30 encounters of Titan and at
- least four of selected icy satellites of greatest interest. In
- addition, the orbiter will make at least two dozen more distant
- flybys of the Saturnian moons. Cassini's orbits will also allow
- it to study Saturn's polar regions in addition to the planet's
- equatorial zone.
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- Throughout the mission, costs will be contained and
- efficiency enhanced by streamlined operations. The Cassini
- Project uses simplified organizational groups to make decisions;
- flight controllers will take advantage of high-level building
- blocks of spacecraft action sequences to carry out mission
- activities.
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- SATURN SCIENCE
-
- "I do not know what to say in a case so surprising, so
- unlooked for and so novel," Galileo Galilei wrote in 1612. The
- source of the Italian astronomer's astonishment: Only two years
- after he discovered them, the rings of Saturn vanished before his
- eyes.
-
- Not that Galileo, however, recognized the rings for what
- they were when he first sighted them in 1610. Having recently
- discovered Jupiter's major moons, he assumed that what he saw
- next to Saturn were two sizable companions close to the planet.
- Two years later, however, they abruptly disappeared. In a few
- more years, they mysteriously returned, larger than ever.
- Galileo concluded that what he saw were some sort of "arms" that
- grew and disappeared for unknown reasons.
-
- Nearly half a century later, the Dutch scientist Christiaan
- Huygens solved the puzzle that vexed Galileo. Thanks to better
- optics, Huygens was able to pronounce in 1659 that the companions
- or arms decorating Saturn were in fact a set of rings. The rings
- were tilted so that, as Saturn orbited the Sun every 29 years,
- the sheet of rings would occasionally seem to vanish as viewed
- on-edge from Earth.
-
- While observing Saturn, Huygens also discovered the moon
- Titan. A few years later, the French-Italian astronomer Jean-
- Dominique Cassini added several other key Saturn discoveries.
- Using new telescopes, Cassini discovered Saturn's four other
- major moons -- Iapetus, Rhea, Tethys, and Dione. In 1675, he
- discovered that Saturn's rings are split largely into two parts
- by a narrow gap -- known since as the "Cassini Division."
-
- We now know that Saturn is one of four giant gaseous (and
- ringed) planets in the solar system, joined by Jupiter, Uranus,
- and Neptune. Second in size only to Jupiter, Saturn is nearly
- ten times the diameter of Earth and its volume would enclose more
- than 750 Earths. Even so, its mass is only 95 times that of
- Earth; with a density less than that of water, it would float in
- an ocean if there were one big enough to hold it.
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- Unlike rocky inner planets such as Earth, Saturn and the
- other gas giants have no surface on which to land. A spacecraft
- pilot foolhardy enough to descend into its atmosphere would
- simply find the surrounding gases becoming denser and denser, the
- temperature progressively hotter; eventually the craft would be
- crushed and melted.
-
- A large, modern telescope will reveal Saturn banded in pale
- yellow and gray; photos from the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft that
- flew by Saturn in the early 1980s showed even more detail in the
- cloud tops of its upper atmosphere. Its neighbor Jupiter runs
- toward reds, whereas the more remote Uranus and Neptune are
- shades of blue.
-
- Why the distinctive colors? The answer, in part, is because
- of how far each planet is from the Sun. This in turn determines
- the temperature, which decides which chemicals will be gases,
- fluids or ices. At Saturn -- some 10 times more distant from the
- Sun than the Earth is -- the temperature is about -180 C (-290
- F). In addition to two primary, colorless gases -- hydrogen and
- helium -- ammonia is relatively plentiful in the planet's upper
- atmosphere. We do not understand fully, however, the source of
- the colors in Saturn's clouds -- an issue that the Cassini
- mission may well resolve.
-
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- The Rings
-
- Although the best telescopes on Earth show three nested main
- rings about Saturn, we now know that the ring system is a
- breathtaking collection of thousands of ringlets. They are not
- solid but rather are made up of countless unconnected particles,
- ranging in size from nearly invisible dust to icebergs the size
- of a house. The spacing and width of the ringlets are
- orchestrated by gravitational tugs from a retinue of orbiting
- moons and moonlets, some near ring edges but most far beyond the
- outermost main rings. Instruments tell us that the rings contain
- water ice, which may cover rocky particles.
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- There are ghostly "spokes" in the rings that flicker on and
- off. What causes them? Scientists believe they may be
- electrically charged particles, but we do not really know. Where
- do the subtle colors in Saturn's rings come from? We cannot say;
- the Cassini mission may well provide the answer.
-
- And what is the origin of the rings themselves? One theory
- is that they are the shattered debris of moons broken apart by
- repeated meteorite impacts. Another theory is that the rings are
- leftover material that never formed into larger bodies when
- Saturn and its moons condensed. Scientists believe that Saturn's
- ring system may even serve as a partial model for the disc of gas
- and dust from which all the planets formed about the early Sun.
- The Cassini mission will undoubtedly give us important clues.
-
-
- Mysterious Moons
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- Saturn has the most extensive system of moons of any planet
- in the solar system -- ranging in diameter from about 40
- kilometers (24 miles) to 5,150 kilometers (3,200 miles), larger
- than the planet Mercury. Most are icy worlds heavily studded
- with craters caused by impacts very long ago.
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- The moon Enceladus, however, poses a mystery. Although
- covered with water ice like Saturn's other moons, it displays an
- abnormally smooth surface; there are very few impact craters on
- the portions seen by Voyager. Has much of the surface of
- Enceladus recently melted to erase craters? Could the moon also
- contain ice volcanoes that provide particles for Saturn's most
- distant faint ring beyond the three main rings?
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- Saturn's moon Iapetus is equally enigmatic. On one side --
- the trailing side in its orbit -- Iapetus is one of the brightest
- objects in the solar system, while its leading side is one of the
- darkest. Scientists surmise that the bright side is water ice
- and the dark side is an organic material of some kind. But how
- the dark material got there is a mystery. Did it rise up from
- the inside of the moon, or was it deposited from the outside?
- The puzzle is compounded by the fact that the dividing line
- between the two sides is inexplicably sharp.
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- Titan
-
- But by far the most intriguing natural satellite of Saturn
- is its largest. Titan lies hidden beneath an opaque atmosphere
- more than fifty percent denser than Earth's. Titan has two major
- components of Earth's atmosphere -- nitrogen and oxygen -- but
- the oxygen is likely frozen as water ice within the body of the
- moon. If Titan received more sunlight, its atmosphere might more
- nearly resemble that of a primitive Earth.
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- What fascinates scientists about Titan's atmosphere is that
- it is filled with a brownish orange haze made of complex organic
- molecules, falling from the sky to the surface. Thus in many
- ways it may be a chemical factory like the primordial Earth.
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- Most scientists agree that conditions on Titan are too cold
- for life to have evolved -- although the most daring speculate
- about the possibility of lifeforms in covered lakes of liquid
- hydrocarbons warmed by the planet's internal heat. Yet even if
- Titan proves to be lifeless, as expected, understanding chemical
- interactions on the distant moon may help us understand better
- the chemistry of the early Earth -- and how we came to be.
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- THE CASSINI SPACECRAFT
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- The Cassini orbiter weighs a total of 2,150 kilograms (4,750
- pounds); after attaching the 350-kilogram Huygens probe and
- loading propellants, the spacecraft weight at launch is 5,630
- kilograms (12,410 pounds). Because of the very dim sunlight at
- Saturn's orbit, solar arrays are not feasible and plans call for
- power to be supplied by a set of radioisotope thermoelectric
- generators, which use heat from the natural decay of plutonium to
- generate electricity to run Cassini. These power generators are
- of the same design as those used on the Galileo and Ulysses
- missions.
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- Equipment for a total of twelve science experiments is
- carried onboard the Cassini orbiter. Another six fly on the
- Huygens Titan probe, which will detach from the orbiter some four
- to five months after arrival at Saturn.
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- The Cassini orbiter advances and extends the United States'
- technology base with several innovations in engineering and
- information systems. Whereas previous planetary spacecraft used
- onboard tape recorders, Cassini pioneers a new solid-state data
- recorder with no moving parts. The recorder will be used in more
- than twenty other missions both within and outside NASA.
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- Similarly, the main onboard computer that directs operations
- of the orbiter uses a novel design drawing on new families of
- electronic chips. Among them are very high-speed integrated
- circuit (VHSIC) chips developed under a U.S. government-industry
- research and development initiative. Also part of the computer
- are powerful new application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC)
- parts; each component replaces a hundred or more traditional
- chips.
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- Elsewhere on the Cassini orbiter, the power system benefits
- from an innovative solid-state power switch being developed from
- the mission. This switch will eliminate rapid fluctuations
- called transients that usually occur with conventional power
- switches, with a significantly improved component lifetime.
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- Huygens Titan Probe
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- The Huygens probe, supplied by the European Space Agency,
- carries a well-equipped robotic laboratory that it will use to
- scrutinize the clouds, atmosphere, and surface of Saturn's moon
- Titan.
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- Released by the Cassini orbiter in late 2004, the Huygens
- probe will drop into Titan's atmosphere some three weeks later.
- As the 2.7-meter-diameter (8.9-foot) probe enters the atmosphere
- it will begin taking measurements in the haze layer above the
- cloud tops. As it descends -- first on a main parachute and
- later on a drogue chute for stability -- various instruments will
- measure the temperature, pressure, density, and energy balance in
- the atmosphere.
-
- As the Huygens probe breaks through the cloud deck, a camera
- will capture pictures of the Titan panorama. Instruments will
- also be used to study properties of Titan's surface remotely --
- and perhaps directly, should the probe survive the landing.
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- Many scientists theorize that Titan may be covered by lakes
- or oceans of methane or ethane, so the Huygens probe is designed
- to function even if it lands in liquid. If the battery-powered
- probe survives its landing, it will relay measurements from
- Titan's surface until the Cassini orbiter flies beyond the
- horizon and out of radio contact.
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- Cassini Orbiter Experiments
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- -- Imaging science subsystem: Takes pictures in visible,
- near-ultraviolet, and near-infrared light.
-
- -- Cassini radar: Maps surface of Titan using radar imager
- to pierce veil of haze. Also used to measure heights of surface
- features.
-
- -- Radio science subsystem: Searches for gravitational
- waves in the universe; studies the atmosphere, rings, and gravity
- fields of Saturn and its moons by measuring telltale changes in
- radio waves sent from the spacecraft.
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- -- Ion and neutral mass spectrometer: Examines neutral and
- charged particles near Titan, Saturn, and the icy satellites to
- learn more about their extended atmospheres and ionospheres.
-
- -- Visual and infrared mapping spectrometer: Identifies the
- chemical composition of the the surfaces, atmospheres, and rings
- of Saturn and its moons by measuring colors of visible light and
- infrared energy given off by them.
-
- -- Composite infrared spectrometer: Measures infrared
- energy from the surfaces, atmospheres, and rings of Saturn and
- its moons to study their temperature and composition.
-
- -- Cosmic dust analyzer: Studies ice and dust grains in and
- near the Saturn system.
-
- -- Radio and plasma wave science: Investigates plasma waves
- (generated by ionized gases flowing out from the Sun or orbiting
- Saturn), natural emissions of radio energy, and dust.
-
- -- Cassini plasma spectrometer: Explores plasma (highly
- ionized gas) within and near Saturn's magnetic field.
-
- -- Ultraviolet imaging spectrograph: Measures ultraviolet
- energy from atmospheres and rings to study their structure,
- chemistry, and compositon.
-
- -- Magnetospheric imaging instrument: Images Saturn's
- magnetosphere and measures interactions between the magnetosphere
- and the solar wind, a flow of ionized gases streaming out from
- the Sun.
-
- -- Dual technique magnetometer: Describes Saturn's magnetic
- field and its interactions with the solar wind, the rings, and
- the moons of Saturn.
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- Huygens Probe Experiments
-
- -- Descent imager and spectral radiometer: Makes images and
- measures temperatures of particles in Titan's atmosphere and on
- Titan's surface.
-
- -- Huygens atmospheric structure instrument: Explores the
- structure and physical properties of Titan's atmosphere.
-
- -- Gas chromatograph and mass spectrometer: Measures the
- chemical composition of gases and suspended particles in Titan's
- atmosphere.
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- -- Aerosol collector pyrolyzer: Examines clouds and
- suspended particles in Titan's atmosphere.
-
- -- Surface science package: Investigates the physical
- properties of Titan's surface.
-
- -- Doppler wind experiment: Studies Titan's winds from
- their effect on the probe during its descent.
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- THE INTERNATIONAL TEAM
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- Hundreds of scientists and engineers from 14 European
- countries and 32 states of the United States make up the team
- designing, fabricating and flying the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft.
-
- In the United States the mission is managed by NASA's Jet
- Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, where the Cassini
- orbiter is also being designed and assembled.
-
- Development of the Huygens Titan probe is managed by the
- European Space Technology and Research Center (ESTEC). ESTEC
- will use a prime contractor in southern France, with equipment
- supplied by many European countries; the batteries and two
- scientific instruments will come from the United States.
-
- The Italian Space Agency is contributing the Cassini
- orbiter's dish-shaped high-gain antenna as well as significant
- portions of three science instruments.
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- Communications with Cassini during the mission will be
- carried out through stations of NASA's Deep Space Network in
- California, Spain, and Australia. Data from the Huygens probe
- will be received at an operations complex in Darmstadt, Germany.
-
- At JPL, Richard J. Spehalski is Cassini project manager.
- Dr. Dennis Matson is Cassini project scientist.
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- 3-19-93 FOD
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