Cassini Significant Events for 11/23/04 - 12/01/04

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Cassini Significant Events
for 11/23/04 - 12/01/04

The most recent spacecraft telemetry was acquired from the Goldstone
tracking station on Monday, December 1. 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/operations/present-position.cfm .

The Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph (UVIS) continued to monitor Saturn's
inner magnetosphere in neutral and ion photon emissions to derive the
distribution and density of atomic and molecular species.  UVIS also
continued to examine the F Ring to monitor changes in ring reflectance
properties.

RADAR performed a Radiometric calibration of their subsystem by examining
microwave sources including the Sun and Saturn among others.

On-board activities this week included an Inertial Reference Unit
calibration, Reaction Wheel Assembly unload, and the uplink of files for
later execution for Probe Battery Depassivation #2, a Cassini to Titan
vector update on 2004-346, Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS) sequence count
rollover error patch, and a Magnetospheric Imaging Instrument (MIMI) STARE
mode for Titan b.

The primary activity this week was the execution of the final Huygens Probe
checkout (PCO).  This in-flight checkout procedure was the last one planned
before separation of the Huygens probe from Cassini in about three weeks.
The preliminary analysis of the real-time data received showed all events in
the checkout procedure occurred as, and when, expected.  For more
information link to:
http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Cassini-Huygens/SEM3AUWJD1E_0.html

Since the start of Approach Science in January of this year, 29509 ISS
images and 6323 Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer cubes have been
acquired.

The project has decided to raise the flyby altitudes of the Titan 5 and
Titan 7 encounters from 950 km to 1025 km.  The Titan Atmospheric Model
Working Group's Ta workshop on November 15 and subsequent discussions and
analyses by both scientists and engineers have produced results that render
950 km flybys questionable without at least one intermediate flyby between
1174 km and 950 km. The 1025 km altitude is low enough to provide a clear
indication of spacecraft safety, or not, at 950 km, yet high enough to be
certain to be safe.

Preliminary indications from the Navigation team are that this action can be
taken at little or no delta-V cost or impact to the occultation sequences or
subsequent encounters. The altitude of Titan 4 - currently at ~2500 km -
lowers slightly, and timing changes to all encounters exclusively from this
change are less than one minute. The navigation team will be releasing a new
spacecraft ephemeris shortly.

Spacecraft Operations Office (SCO) personnel reran the Probe Relay and
Playback portion of the end-to-end test on Monday and Tuesday of this week.
The Integrated Test Lab rerun was requested to collect additional redlines
for the Probe Relay sequence and to verify the changes made to SCO
procedures as a result of the earlier end-to-end simulation.

Development continues for the S06 Titan-b live Inertial Vector Propagator
(IVP) update.   Files for the update were transferred to the Integrated Test
Laboratory (ITL) and a test performed from November 24 through November 28.
Initial assessments from both CDS and ACS were that the test was a success.
A meeting was held on November 30 where the Titan-b flyby live IVP update
files were approved and on December 1 were uplinked to the spacecraft.

Sequence development is ongoing for tour sequences S07 through S12, and S37
through S41.

A Project Briefing and Waiver Disposition meeting was held for S09.  S10
Preliminary port 1 products were delivered as part of the Science Operations
Plan Update process (SOPU). The products were merged and the reports
published.

The S11 aftermarket process concluded this week.  Products will be provided
from this activity to the leads for the SOPU process, which kicks off on
December 9.

An Assessment meeting was held for S12 to review all of the requested
changes to the sequence.   It looks like all of the requested changes can
fit within the available resources.  Unless the Target Working Teams and
Orbiter Science Teams recommendations change over the next couple of weeks,
it is likely that the decision meeting scheduled for December 14 will be
canceled.

A wrap-up meeting was held last Wednesday for tour sequences S37/S38 as part
of the Science Operations Plan Implementation (SOPI) process.  These
sequences have now been archived and will begin the aftermarket process in
August of 2007.  Preliminary port #1 occurred as part of SOPI for S39/S40.
The products were merged and the reports published.

An ISS flight software patch to avoid warm restarts was approved last week
by the Project.  The uplink files were prepared and approved for uplink.
The patch will be installed into the instrument on December 3.

A Delivery Coordination Meeting was held for Radio Science Subsystem (RSS)
software POSTLB, the final software tool in the RSS tool suite.  This tool
does post-processing of the Inertial Vector Definition and Doppler files
generated by LMTTRK and BISTAT.  It removes pointing discontinuities at
ingress and egress during occultation observations.

On November 20, a Bay Area Writing Project team member introduced 50 NASA
education representatives to, "Reading, Writing, and Rings" at a nationwide
workshop in Houston, Texas. These representatives train educators throughout
the country on NASA materials.

Saturn Observation Campaign members in Spain and Ireland published articles
in their local magazines about the Cassini Mission to Saturn.

On November 27 the Los Alamos Monitor did a follow up on Girl Scout Troup
128 who seven years ago signed on to a 3.5 billion km voyage out beyond the
moon and nearby planets.  Now their names are among 616,400 handwritten
signatures from 81 countries on board the Cassini orbiter, as it settles in
around the great ringed world of Saturn, the sixth planet from the Sun.

Check out the Cassini web site for the latest image advisory: Cassini Shows
Grandeur of Two Saturn Moons. The pictures are available at
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov.

Cassini images made Astronomy Picture of the Week three times last week with
images of Tethys and Dione, and a Radar Image of Titan.
The Cassini-Huygens mission 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, manages the
Cassini-Huygens mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington,
D.C.  JPL designed, developed and assembled the Cassini orbiter.


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