Cassini Significant Events for 08/25/05 - 08/30/05

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Cassini Significant Events 
for 08/25/05 - 08/30/05

The most recent spacecraft telemetry was acquired Tuesday, August 30, from
the Goldstone tracking stations. 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 .

Thursday, August 25 (DOY 237):

Orbit trim maneuver #29 (OTM-29), the Titan 6 cleanup maneuver, was
successfully performed today.  The main engine burn began at 11:31 am PDT.
A "quick look" immediately after the maneuver showed the burn duration was
9.3 seconds, giving a delta-V of 1.4 m/s.  All subsystems reported nominal
performance after the maneuver.

The Cassini Integrated Test Laboratory team is currently hosting a member of
the Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA) instrument team at JPL.  CDA has brought
their engineering model to be connected to the ITL for flight software
testing. The hardware will be here till mid-September.

Friday, August 26 (DOY 238):

The S15 sequence leads coordinated a test to be performed in the ITL of the
Radar Titan 8 observations and special playbacks of data for that flyby.
Analysis is underway to verify that the tests were successful.

Nine Instrument Expanded Block (IEB) files were uplinked to the spacecraft
in support of S14.  Sequence leads were able to verify that 8 of the 9 IEBs
executed nominally and the readouts of telemetry were as predicted.  There
were no dropped packets for these files. 

Cassini Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS) team members will verify the ninth file.
S14 will begin execution on Tuesday of next week.

Saturday, August 27 (DOY 239):

An additional IEB file and the S14 background sequence went up to the
spacecraft today.

Monday, August 29 (DOY 241):

The 37th Cassini Project Science Group Meeting got underway this week at
Imperial College, London, England.

The S17 Science Operations Plan (SOP) Update process officially began today.
The SOP Update is a phase in the sequence development process where
scientists and other operations team members are allowed to make limited
observation and activity design changes from what was developed in SOP
Implementation.  This allows for late breaking discoveries and other
information learned in prior sequences to be incorporated into future
observations that have not completed their sequence development. S17 was
originally archived back in April of 2003 so it has been over two years
since scientists have looked at this product.  The kick-off meeting, led by
the Science Planning Team Lead, lays out the ground rules and schedule which
all team members must abide by in order to incorporate their changes.

SOP Update for S16 continued this week with the completion of the Spacecraft
Operations Office and Science Planning Team analysis of the S16 sequence
merge.  Output products were posted to the program file repository for
review.

A kick-off meeting was held for the S14 DOY 248-250 Live Update process for
an Inertial Vector Propagator update and Radio Science Live Movable Block.
The current version of the schedule for this process has Navigation
delivering the orbit determination (OD) solution at 1700 PDT today, with
Science Planning (SP) releasing its epoch time shift and GEOEPOCHS file 2
hours later, and Radio Science
(RSS) starting its analysis at that point and continuing for the next
8 hours.  Navigation is aiming for an 1100 PDT OD solution release, so SP
and RSS can get an earlier start.  The Go/No-Go meeting is scheduled for
tomorrow so the instruments and SP are expected to have their analysis ready
by then. Update:  It's a go!

Spacecraft Operations Office, Navigation, and Uplink Operations files for
OTM-30 have been delivered and placed in the program file repository.  The
maneuver approval meeting will be held today at 5:00pm PDT.  Uplink begins
Tuesday at 07:05 AM PDT.  On-station time is 11:45 AM for a 1:05 PM burn.

Tuesday, August 30 (DOY 242):

The S14 background sequence began execution today.  The sequence will run
for 39 days and will conclude on October 8.  During S14 there will be two
targeted flybys, two dust hazards to be avoided, eight OTMs, one live
movable block, and three live IVP updates. Forty-three Deep Space Network
(DSN) tracks will be used to downlink over 49.7 Gb of data.

A Design Delivery Review was held for Multi-Mission Image Processing
Laboratory software version D34.  This delivery contains many small updates
to Imaging Science Subsystem & Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer
uplink and downlink software modules which correct product labels and
eliminate operations workarounds.  The delivery was accepted by all projects
and MGSS.  The software will go on-line on September 9.

The S17 Sponge Bit meeting was cancelled today due to a delay in the release
of the DSN allocation file.  The file is necessary for Cassini Science
Planning to determine if there have been any changes to the amount of data
that the DSN is capable of receiving.  If they can receive more, then data
volume that was held as margin is given to the teams for science
acquisition.  The allocation file will be delivered by the end of the week
with the Sponge Bit meeting to follow.

Orbit trim maneuver #30 (OTM-30), the apoapsis maneuver preceding Titan-7,
was successfully completed today.  The main engine burn began at 13:05 am
PDT.  A "quick look" immediately after the maneuver showed the burn duration
was 91.35 seconds, giving a delta-V of 14.3 m/s.  All subsystems reported
nominal performance after the maneuver.

A news release has been issued regarding the age of the "tiger stripes"
discovered on Enceladus.  Cracked features approximately 140 km long, spaced
about 40 km apart and running roughly parallel to each other, act like vents
spewing vapor and fine ice water particles that have become ice crystals.
This crystallization process can help scientists pin down the age of the
features. For the text of the full release and other materials, go to the
Cassini Web Site at http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov.

Wrap up:

Check out the Cassini web site at http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov for the latest
press releases and images.

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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