Cassini Significant Events for 05/15/03 - 05/21/03

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Cassini Significant Events
for 05/15/03 - 05/21/03

The Cassini flight team successfully restarted the C37 background sequence
on Saturday, May 17 after last week's safing event. Normal sequencing
resumed with Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) and Imaging
Science Subsystem (ISS) star calibrations. The spacecraft engineering
subsystems and instruments are performing nominally.  The instrument
calibrations that did not occur due to spacecraft safing will be rescheduled for a subsequent sequence. 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/operations/present-position.cfm .

Additional activities performed this week included Radio and Plasma Wave
Science High Frequency Receiver Calibrations, a Ultraviolet Imaging
Spectrograph (UVIS) raster observation, a reaction wheel assembly friction
test, an attitude control high water mark clear, and the successful uplink
of the Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) instrument flight software
(FSW) version 2.0.1, and an CIRS FSW checkout mini-sequence.  The checkout
mini-sequence will execute next week.

Due to concerns over the performance of reaction wheel three, the project
has decided not to perform the thirty day solar conjunction experiment under reaction wheel control. The solar corona portions of the experiment using K-band will continue over the Goldstone tracking station as planned using the thrusters for attitude control.

ISS acquired 24 images during a point and stare calibration image activity
with VIMS riding along.  ISS also acquired 232 images, including dark frames and two by two mosaics, during a photometric calibration of the star Vega.

The first preliminary delivery port for Science Operations Plan Integration
products for tour sequences S07 / S08 occurred this week, with the first
official input port scheduled for next week.

The CIRS instrument team has provided the Planetary Data System atmospheres
node with a sample volume containing Jupiter data.  The volume is under peer review, and is also being reviewed by members of the Cassini/Huygens Project Science Group.  The review should be completed within four weeks.  CIRS is the second instrument team, following the Radio Science Subsystem to produce a volume for peer review.

Program members from various teams and offices are attending the
thirty-first Project Science Group meeting in Venice, Italy this week.

Uplink Operations personnel gave a demonstration of the Cassini Information
Management System (CIMS) to the Section 314 technologist.  The intent of the demonstration was to initiate exploration of CIMS potential for future use in the Multi-Mission Software set.

Approximately 25,000 people attended the JPL Open house last weekend.
Cassini personnel staffed a booth where they could answer questions
regarding the program.  In addition, members of the Outreach Team debuted a
beta-test version of "Ring World", the project's planetarium show.  Response from the public was extremely enthusiastic.

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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