Here’s What the Cassini Spacecraft is Revealing During its Final Days
NASA's 20-year old spacecraft Cassini is spiraling toward a death dive with Saturn. But the "Grand Finale," a wholly redesigned and ad-hoc mission, will take us on one more majestic adventure, revolutionizing our knowledge of the Saturnian system.
The Cassini spacecraft is locked in a death dance with Saturn, yet its time there has not only revolutionized our knowledge of the ringed planet. In the course of its mission, Cassini has also revealed new information about Saturn’s moons, like Titan — which, we discovered after the touchdown of the Huygens probe in2005, hints at what Earth may have been like very early in its primordial life.
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NASA/JPL-Caltech |
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The nuclear-powered spacecraft’s four-year foray in Saturnian orbit began in 2004, and filled our screens with the majesty of Saturn’s clouds and signature rings. It also studied the moons Enceladus, a frozen body striated with fractures and crevasses, and Titan, the hazy, planet-sized moon whose liquid methane rivers and sea astounded scientists. Enceladus’ icy surface masks what many suspect to be a subsurface ocean, potentially bustling with microbial life, much the same as we suspect of Jupiter’s moon Europa.
Last Monday Cassini executed the first of five final orbits, skimming Saturn’s atmosphere. As one of NASA’s flagship missions (high-end explorations of the planets), the “Grand Finale” for the $3.26-billion, 20-year mission, will end in a spectacular display, disintegrating into Saturn’s atmosphere.
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By discovering conditions for life on Saturn’s moons, Cassini made its death dive a moral necessity for NASA: if Cassini were allowed to continue orbiting, it would run out of rocket fuel and leave mission operators unable to control its course. Without outside corrections, the spacecraft could crash into one of those moons, potentially contaminating any life there with Earthly microbes. The irony of flagship missions like Cassini, and Galileo before it, is that their destruction came precisely because they exceeded our expectations.
Let’s take a look at Cassini’s last days:
Cassini’s final five orbits will use Titan’s gravity. This gravitational slingshot conserves untold amounts of fuel, the supply of which the craft has nearly exhausted.
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NASA/JPL-Caltech |
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NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute |
These two images of Titan reveal its cloudy, hazy atmosphere.
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NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute. |
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NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI/Kevin M. Gill |
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NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute |
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NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute |
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NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute |
It’s clear that this isn’t an obsolete old probe meting out its final days on a glorified survey mission. It’s one more adventure; a final symphonic movement for a world(s)-class orchestra.
References: Tech Insider, NASA, Futurism