Huygens begins its final
journey into the unknown
The European Space Agencys Huygens probe was successfully released
by NASAs Cassini orbiter early on Christmas morning and is now on
a controlled collision course toward Saturns largest and most mysterious
moon, Titan, where on 14 January it will make a descent through one of
the most intriguing atmospheres in the solar system to an unknown surface.
The separation occurred at 02:00 UTC (03:00 CET): A few minutes after
separation, Cassini turned back to Earth and relayed back information
about the separation. This signal then took 1 hour and 8 minutes to cross
the 1.2 billion kilometres separating the Cassini spacecraft and Earth.
Todays release is another successful milestone in the Cassini/Huygens
odyssey, said Dr David Southwood, ESAs director of science
programmes. This was an amicable separation after seven years of
living together. Our thanks to our partners at NASA for the lift. Each
spacecraft will now continue on its own but we expect theyll keep
in touch to complete this amazing mission. Now all our hopes and expectations
are focused on getting the first in-situ data from a new world weve
been dreaming of exploring for decades.
Final stage of a 7-year odyssey
The Cassini/Huygens mission, jointly developed by NASA, ESA and the Italian
space agency (ASI), began on 15 October 1997, when the composite spacecraft
were launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, atop a Titan 4B/Centaur vehicle.
Together, the two probes weighed 5548 kg at launch and became the largest
space mission ever sent to the outer planets. To gain sufficient velocity
to reach Saturn, they had to conduct four gravity-assist manoeuvres by
flying twice by Venus, once by the Earth and once by Jupiter. On 1 July
Cassini/Huygens eventually became the first spacecraft to enter an orbit
around Saturn.
On 17 December, while on its third orbit around the ringed planet, the
Cassini orbiter performed a manoeuvre to enter a controlled collision
trajectory towards Titan. As planned, a fine tuning of the trajectory
took place on 22 December to place Huygens on its nominal entry trajectrory.
While Huygens will remain on this trajectory till it plunges into Titans
atmosphere on 14 January, the orbiter will perform a deflection manoeuvre
on 28 December to avoid crashing onto the moon. Todays separation
was achieved by the firing of pyrotechnic devices. Under the action of
push-off springs, ramps and rollers, the probe was released at a relative
velocity of about 0.3 m/s with a spin rate of 7 rpm. Telemetry data confirming
the separation were collected by NASAs Deep Space Network stations
in Madrid, Spain and Goldstone, California, when the telemetry playback
signal from Cassini eventually reached the Earth.
The Huygens probe is now dormant and will remain so for its 20-day coast
phase to Titan. Four days before its release, a triply-redundant timer
was programmed in order to wake-up the probes systems shortly before
arrival on Titan.
Exploring Titans atmosphere
Huygens is scheduled to enter Titans atmosphere at about 09:06
UTC (10:06 CET) on 14 January, entering at a relatively steep angle of
65° and a velocity of about 6 km/s. The target is over the southern
hemisphere, on the day side. Protected by an ablative thermal shield,
the probe will decelerate to 400 m/s within 3 minutes before it deploys
a 2.6 m pilot chute at about 160 km. After 2.5 seconds this chute will
pull away the probes aft cover and the main parachute, 8.3 m in
diameter, will deploy to stabilise the probe. The front shield will then
be released and the probe, whose main objective is to study Titans
atmosphere, will open inlet ports and deploy booms to collect the scientific
data. All instruments will have direct access to the atmosphere to conduct
detailed in-situ measurements of its structure, dynamics and chemistry.
Imagery of the surface along the track will also be acquired. These data
will be transmitted directly to the Cassini orbiter, which, at the same
time, will be flying over Titan at 60 000 km at closest approach. Earth-based
radiotelescopes will also try to detect the signals tone directly.
After 15 minutes, at about 120 km, Huygens will release its main parachute
and a smaller 3 m drogue chute will take over to allow a deeper plunge
through the atmosphere within the lifetime of the probes batteries.
The descent will last about 140 minutes before Huygens impacts the surface
at about 6 m/s. If the probe survives all this, its extended mission will
start, consisting in direct characterisation of Titans surface for
as long as the batteries can power the instruments and the Cassini orbiter
is visible over the horizon at the landing site, i.e. not more than 130
minutes.
At that time, the Cassini orbiter will reorient its main antenna dish
toward Earth in order to play back the data collected by Huygens, which
will be received by NASAs 70-m diameter antenna in Canberra, Australia,
67 minutes later. Three playbacks are planned, to ensure that all recorded
data are safely transmitted to Earth. Then Cassini will continue its mission
exploring Saturn and its moons, which includes multiple additional flybys
of Titan in the coming months and years.
A probe deep into space and time
Bigger than Mercury and slightly smaller than Mars, Titan is unique in
having a thick hazy nitrogen-rich atmosphere containing carbon-based compounds
that could yield important clues about how Earth came to be habitable.
The chemical makeup of the atmosphere is thought to be very similar to
Earths before life began, although colder (-180°C) and so lacking
liquid water. The in-situ results from Huygens, combined with global observations
from repeated flybys of Titan by the Cassini orbiter, are thus expected
to help us understand not only one of the most exotic members of our solar
system but also the evolution of the early Earth's atmosphere and the
mechanisms that led to the dawn of life on our planet.
Europes main contribution to the Cassini mission, the Huygens probe
was built for ESA by an industrial team led by Alcatel Space. This 320
kg spacecraft is carrying six science instruments to study the atmosphere
during its descent. Laboratories and research centres from all ESA member
countries, the United States, Poland and Israel have been involved in
developing this science payload. The Huygens atmospheric structure instrument
package (HASI) will measure temperature and pressure profiles, and characterise
winds and turbulences. It will also be able to detect lightning and even
to measure the conductivity and permittivity of the surface if the probe
survises the impact.
The gas chromatograph mass spectrometer (GCMS) will provide fine chemical
analysis of the atmosphere and the aerosols collected by the aerosol collector
and pyrolyser (ACP). The descent imager/spectral radiometer (DISR) will
collect images, spectra and other data on the atmosphere, the radiation
budget, cloud structures, aerosols and the surface. The doppler wind experiment
(DWE) will provide a zonal wind profile while the surface science package
(SSP) will characterise the landing site if Huygens survives the impact.
The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperation between NASA, the European
Space Agency and ASI, the Italian space agency. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory
(JPL), a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena,
is managing the mission for NASAs Office of Space Science, Washington.
JPL designed, developed and assembled the Cassini orbiter.
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