Cassini Significant Events for 08/15/02 - 08/21/02

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Cassini Significant Events
for 08/15/02 - 08/21/02

The most recent spacecraft telemetry was acquired from the Goldstone
tracking station on Wednesday, August 21. 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/ .

August 18th marked the 3-year anniversary of Cassini's Earth flyby.

On-board activities this week included clearing of the ACS high water
marks, an autonomous Solid State Recorder Memory Load Partition repair,
memory readout of the CDS state matrix, Radio and Plasma Wave Science
High Frequency Receiver calibrations, and uplink of the Imaging Science
Subsystem flight software checkout.  The checkout will execute later
this month.

A Project briefing was held for the Cruise 35 sequence.  Program Manager
approval was given for the sequence to proceed to implementation.

A joint Satellite Orbiter Science Team / Project Science Group (PSG)
Surfaces Working Group meeting was held to finalize the plans for the
Enceladus flyby on Rev 3.

The first merged Science Operations Plan product for tour sequences
S11/S12 was handed off to ACS for end-to-end pointing validation via the
Kinematic Prediction Tool /Inertial Vector Propagator.

A Flight Hardware safety inspection and an Electro-static Discharge
(ESD) survey was performed at the Instrument Operations Facility
Instrument testbed laboratory.  The lab was considered to be in good
shape by the surveyors, with a few suggestions given to bring the lab
into full compliance with standards. Cognizant engineers for RADAR,
Radio Science Subsystem, Imaging Science Subsystem and Visual and
Infrared Mapping Spectrometer have taken actions to implement the
suggestions.

The topic at this week's Mission Planning Forum addressed the review of
a draft Engineering Change Request to update the probe mission timeline
in the Mission Plan, and address the interfaces between orbiter science
and the probe mission. Specifically, it will define the boundary times
of the start of probe activities at the start of S6, the Iapetus C
window, the critical sequence window, and the probe playback plan,
including the end of probe activities. Orbiter activity restrictions
during each phase were also discussed. Eight Requests for Action
submitted at the last Cassini Project Science Group meeting were
reviewed and dispositioned this week.  One was withdrawn and the rest
were accepted for action.

Edison power glitches occurred last Saturday, and early Monday morning
affecting the Cassini Integrated Test Laboratory.  At the request of the
Cassini Program, JPL building 230 was transferred from Edison power to
generator power until the UPS capability is restored.

Mission Assurance supported an internal ISO audit.  The topic under
evaluation was "Control of Non-Conforming Product."  Cassini documents
non-conformances via Incident Surprise Anomaly (ISA) reports.
Verification, validation and corrective actions are thoroughly
documented prior to anomaly report evaluation and closure by Mission
Assurance. In addition, ISAs are tracked and reported on monthly, in the
form of status, risk assessment, trend analysis and metrics.

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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