Cassini Significant Events for 07/02/02 - 07/10/02

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Cassini Significant Events
for 07/02/02 - 07/10/02

The most recent spacecraft telemetry was acquired from the Goldstone
tracking station on Tuesday, July 9. The Cassini spacecraft is in an
excellent state of health and is operating normally.  Information on the
present position and speed of the Cassini spacecraft may be found on the
"Present Position" web page located at
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/cassini/english/where/ .

Instrument activities at the conclusion of the C32 sequence included
maintenance of the Magnetospheric Imaging Instrument Low Energy
Magnetospheric Measurement subsystem motor, power off of the Imaging
Science Subsystem (ISS) Narrow Angle Camera replacement heater to lower
temperatures for C33 imaging activities, and the conclusion of the Solar
Conjunction Experiment.  Spacecraft activities included a Reaction Wheel
Assembly unload and a return to thruster control, clearing of the high
water marks, and an AACS periodic engineering maintenance containing a
main engine gimbal actuator exercise, Backup Assisted Load Format
Injection Loader maintenance, and backup reaction wheel exercise.

C32 was the last sequence of Cassini's cruise subphase.  C33, the first
sequence in the Space Science Subphase, was uplinked and began execution
this week.  Initial instrument activities included a Radio and Plasma
Wave Science high frequency receiver calibration, an ISS dark frame
observation and a Spica observation to support haze anomaly resolution,
and a Cosmic Dust Analyzer test of a new housekeeping data type.
Spacecraft activities included transition to reaction wheel control,
clearing of the AACS high water marks, and an autonomous Solid State
Recorder memory load partition repair.

Radio Science data acquisition for the Solar Conjunction Experiment
ended July 5, completing the month-long experiment.  During this time
the Radio Science Team and Mission Support and Services Office personnel
provided round the clock support.  About 24 megabytes of data were
collected, with about 90 percent being open-loop data and the other 10
percent being closed-loop data.  Data analysis has begun.

The official end of Superior Conjunction occurred when the Sun - Earth -
Probe angle reached 15 degrees. The Spacecraft Office reported reaction
wheel predictions for the 30-day conjunction period were met as
expected, and that no desaturations were required. Command testing was
performed during the week surrounding minimum separation.  Results were
found to be similar to the previous 2 conjunction periods.  Commanding
is unaffected down to about 2 degrees Sun-Earth-Probe angle, then drops
to about a 10% command acceptance rate at 1 degree separation.

The Huygens Probe team has finalized the sequence for Probe Checkout #10
and delivered it to the Sequence Virtual Team.

ISS completed the final report for the decontamination activities
performed in C32.

SCO distributed a draft version of Probe Relay Critical Sequence
Document to the Probe Mission Review Team.

The kickoff meeting was held for the second Tour Science Planning
Virtual Team process.  Under development are Science Operation Plans for
S11 and S12, covering orbits 8 through 12.  This process will complete
in October of this year.

Status presented at last week's Project Science Group meeting held in
Lisbon, Portugal included Cassini Program, Huygens Probe, Science
Planning, and archiving reports.  Each of the Target Working Teams,
science teams and Discipline Working Groups also presented status
reports.  Discussions were held on options for communications with Earth
during Saturn Orbit Insertion.

Topics at this week's Mission Planning Forum included a status report on
rolling downlinks and rocking downlinks, an update on results of ranging
on/off for 70m stations and arrays, and the orbiter activity plan during
the Huygens mission.  Discussion included restrictions on orbiter
science activities.  The orbiter activity plan will be presented at next
week's Probe Relay Design and Risk Review.

Uplink Operations Team members traveled to the University of Michigan to
perform training classes on the Pointing Design Tool for Cassini Plasma
Spectrometer and Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer instrument team
members.

Mission Assurance has developed a set of metrics for risk management
status reporting.  A task plan has been negotiated with Raytheon, to
implement the metrics in the on-line Risk Management Tool along with the
capability to download the risk management database into an excel
spreadsheet.  The metrics will provide an illustration of the aggregate
project risk exposure, over time and by mission phase.

Cassini Education Outreach has taken delivery of the final version of
each of 20 educator briefs that form the basis for the "Saturn In Your
Kitchen and Backyard" series. Each activity is inquiry based, hands-on,
and is aligned with national science education standards. The educator
briefs will be available through the education section of the Cassini
web site.

Cassini is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and
the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of
the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif., manages the
Cassini mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C.

Cassini Outreach
Cassini Mission to Saturn and Titan
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
California Institute of Technology
National Aeronautics and Space Administration



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