Cassini Significant Events for 11/22/05 - 11/30/05

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Cassini Significant Events 
for 11/22/05 - 11/30/05

The most recent spacecraft telemetry was acquired Wednesday, November 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 .

The Significant Events reporting period has been modified for the two weeks
around the Thanksgiving Holiday. Last week the report covered from Thursday,
November 17, through Monday, November 21.  This week it picks up on Tuesday,
November 22 and continues through Wednesday, November 30.

Tuesday, November 22 (DOY 326):

It's going to be a very busy week on through the Thanksgiving holiday.
Today at 9:00 AM, the DOY 330 Live Inertial Vector Propagator (IVP) Kickoff
Meeting was held.  Then at 2:00 PM the Orbit Trim Maneuver 43 (OTM)
cancellation meeting was held.  It was decided not to cancel.  Finally, at
9:00 PM the OTM-043 approval meeting was held.

Radio Science Subsystem (RSS) team members performed a Gravity Operations
Readiness Test (ORT) in preparation for Rhea gravity science observations to
be executed over the weekend.

Wednesday, November 23, (DOY 327):

The Rhea DOY 330 Live Update was cancelled today at the Go/No Go meeting.
Since OTM-043 was not canceled, changes in the trajectory will be
negligible.

Orbit trim maneuver #43 (OTM-43) was performed today.  The Reaction Control
Subsystem burn began at 6:15 am PST.  Telemetry immediately after the
maneuver showed the burn duration was 63.125 sec, giving a delta-V of
approximately 60 mm/s.  All subsystems reported nominal performance after
the maneuver.

Pandora: A Shepherd Moon of Saturn was Astronomy Picture of the Day today.
Cassini passed about 50,000 kilometers from the moon in early September and
captured the highest resolution image of Pandora ever taken.  Features as
small as 300 meters can be discerned on 80-kilometer wide Pandora. Craters
on Pandora appear to be covered over by some sort of material, providing a
much smoother appearance than sponge-like Hyperion. Pandora is of interest
because, along with its companion moon Prometheus, it helps shepherd the
particles of Saturn's F ring.

Thursday, November 24 (DOY 328):  Thanksgiving Day

It's Thanksgiving Day and all is well with the spacecraftŠ and a handful of
people who needed to come in to support commanding today.  Flying a
spacecraft is a 24-7 operation!  Uplink Operations, Mission Support and
Services Office Personnel, and team personnel from RADAR, the Magnetometer
Subsystem (MAG), and the Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA) supported the uplink of
commands for a RADAR Instrument Expanded Block trigger for Rhea, a change of
MAG housekeeping mode, a CDA setup mini-sequence, CDA commands to reset and
reload, and finally, commands to update downlink telemetry modes for the
DSS-24 and DSS-15 passes on DOY 334.  The uplink of telemetry modes is due
to the late "coming on line" of DSS-15.  The details of what Cassini is
doing to work around the DSS-15 situation were reported last week.

Friday, November 25 (DOY 329):

MUSES-C requested additional Goldstone coverage to support their asteroid
touchdown.  The Cassini Program was contacted by the DSN schedulers
regarding this situation.  After discussion it was determined that RSS would
be willing to release the end of the DSS-26 Cassini track without
significant impact to the RSS ORT or Gravity Science experiments underway
today.  This worked for all parties involved.

Saturday, November 26 (DOY 330):

On November 26, Cassini made its only targeted flyby of Rhea in the prime
mission.  During this, one of the best icy satellite encounters of the tour,
the Magnetospheric and Plasma Science instruments  performed observations
during the almost diametric wake crossing at 500 km altitude, with excellent
and stable ride-along during the RSS observations. This flyby was ideal for
studying Rhea's interaction with the magnetosphere and for measuring the
composition of material sputtered off the surface. The Optical Remote
Sensing instruments performed global mapping and global color observations
at spatial resolutions up to 270 m/pxl. Near closest approach, while the
spacecraft was Earth pointed for the gravity experiment, the cameras took a
few images that might reach spatial resolutions better than 20 m/pxl.  RADAR
took scatterometry data of four quadrants of Rhea as well as radiometry
raster scans centered on the target.

Cassini Radio Science conducted a Rhea Gravity Observation on Saturday and
Sunday, November 26 and 27. This was the last planned RSS icy satellite
gravity observation in the tour and a very important observation for RSS
gravity science. Only Titan and Saturn gravity observations remain. 

Sunday, November 27, (DOY 331):

Non-targeted flybys of Enceladus and Helene occurred today.  Observations
included Enceladus color photometry/polarization and geyser/plume search,
transits of Enceladus across Calypso, Epimetheus across Janus, and Tethys
across Enceladus, as well as other Tethys observations, and a Mimas
spectrophotometry campaign.

OTM-044 was successfully performed today.  The RCS burn began at 9:27 PM
PST.  Telemetry obtained immediately after the maneuver showed the burn
duration was 262.75 sec, giving a delta-V of about 237 mm/s.  All subsystems
reported nominal performance after the OTM.

Tuesday, November 29 (DOY 333):

Soon the project will be coming to a decision about what Titan altitudes to
fly for the remainder of the prime mission. All of the relevant data has
been made available for any review or analyses the teams might wish to
conduct.   A Mission Planning forum was held today to discuss the Titan
altitude profile for the remaining flybys. Since time is growing short on
this issue, now is the time for the science teams to perform studies and ask
questions. It is planned that the altitude profile will be selected this
week, after which point it will be too late to argue for higher or lower
altitudes.

Wednesday, November 30 (DOY 334):

CDA performed a scheduled decontamination today.

At 10 a.m. EST Wednesday, the European Space Agency (ESA) presented the
latest Huygens probe and Mars Express orbiter results during back-to-back
briefings from the agency's Paris headquarters.

Mission Planning presented statistics on low Titan flyby altitude tumbling
densities and model uncertainties to the Project today.  Safe altitudes were
shown as a function of risk factor. After discussion, the Program Manager
chose to use a risk factor around 5%.  Specific altitudes were then modified
by rounding inbound flybys up and by rounding outbound flybys down.  In two
special cases science requested and was granted an additional 5 or 10 km
lower.  For the two flybys with optional orientations, science requested to
choose the higher altitude to preserve science options.  Mission Planning
will present a final product of approved altitudes to the Navigation Team
this week.

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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