Cassini Update - August 4, 2006

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Cassini Significant Events 
for 07/27/06 - 08/02/06

Thursday, July 27 (DOY 208):

It was reported in the Cassini Significant Events last week that the
atmospheric density measured at Titan 16 was higher than expected. The
Titan Atmospheric Modeling Working Group (TAMWG) met this morning to
discuss this result and assess whether the altitudes selected for
upcoming encounters are still acceptable. At the conclusion of the
meeting, the TAMWG recommended no changes to the altitudes of upcoming
encounters. The new T16 data point has not fundamentally changed our
understanding of Titan's atmospheric profile, except to indicate a less
steep falloff in density at high latitudes. Cassini only has one future
Titan flyby at very high latitude, Titan 32. Much like T16, this
encounter is at 84 deg N latitude with a closest approach at 950 km, so
it should be safe as well.

One of the things that presents a challenge to Cassini scientists and
sequence developers is attempting to respond to new scientific
discoveries as they arise. Background sequence S24 completed Science
Operations Plan Implementation in March 2004. At that time the basic
sequence was delivered to the project file repository. Science Planning
was chartered to archive a sequence that if necessary would fly on the
spacecraft "as is." Now roll the clocks forward to July 27, 2006. S24
has been through both the Aftermarket Process and the Science Operations
Plan Update Process. It is currently in final development prior to
uplink. The first of four phases of that development process is
complete. But, due to the discovery of lakes near Titan's north pole
over the weekend, RADAR has requested re-pointing of their T19
observation to cover more of the same region. What to do?

It was decided to stick with the process and have RADAR submit their
pointing changes in the third phase. Although this decreases the number
of iterations available to get the pointing right, it allows the other
instruments and AACS time to properly assess any impacts they might
have. To support the development of this observation, an interim set of
sequence products was produced with the new RADAR pointing, to give the
Attitude and Articulation Control Subsystem (AACS) time to evaluate it
and make a c-kernel available to teams that might wish to examine it. At
this time S24 is on track for final approval in September, and it is
hoped to have lakes in its future.

Friday, July 28 (DOY 209):

Science data archive deliveries for data acquired during the period of
July through September 2005 are now complete. The next archive delivery
port is October 1.

The official port occurred today for S25 as part of the Science
Operations Plan (SOP) Update process. The merged products are currently
being run through end-to-end pointing validation by AACS. The Project
Briefing and Waiver Disposition Meeting is scheduled for August 9. The
SOP Update product is handed off to the sequence leads on August 11 for
the final development process.

Monday, July 31 (DOY 212):

The Cassini RADAR image of Titan's methane lakes is Astronomy Picture of
the Day today.

Tuesday, August 1 (DOY 213):

Orbit Trim Maneuver (OTM) #69, an apoapsis maneuver setting up for the
Titan 17 encounter on September 7, was performed today. This main engine
burn began at 2:30 PM PDT. Telemetry immediately after the maneuver
showed a burn duration of 33.8 seconds, giving a delta-V of 5.4 m/sec.
All subsystems reported nominal performance after the maneuver. A
contingency DSS-15 track that had been retained for the DOY 214 backup
OTM-69 window in case the DSS-14 antenna went red was released at the
successful completion of the burn. Cassini thanks MGS, MER and Odyssey
for their help in making this track available. The next OTM is scheduled
for September 4.

Solar Conjunction occurs when the Sun is between the spacecraft and
Earth. This year it will last from August 2 through August 12, and is a
time of reduced commanding and downlink capability. Cassini enters Solar
Conjunction tomorrow with a separation angle of 4 degrees. During
conjunction, communications with the spacecraft become degraded due to
interference from the sun. For the next ten days the Spacecraft
Operations and Mission Support and Services offices will participate in
a campaign where a command file consisting of 10 no-op commands will be
uplinked to the spacecraft ten times daily. This will allow the teams to
obtain link characterizations and accumulate statistics for uplink
reliability at decreased separation angles. With the exception of these
no-op command files, Spacecraft Operations has asked for and received a
command moratorium. Additional commands will only be sent in the event
of an emergency. On Saturday, the spacecraft will be turned so that the
High Gain Antenna is continuously pointed to Earth, and 1896 bps
telemetry continues while separation is less than 2 deg. Normal playback
downlink rates will resume on August 10.

There is a great write up on conjunction on the Cassini web site. For
more information link to: http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/home/index.cfm

Cassini's "For Educators" website has a hands-on activity called
"Monitoring the Sun's Corona." Scroll down the Saturn in your Kitchen
and backyard section to "Saturn System Science" to find it.
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/education/edu-58-kitchen.cfm. In this
activity, students of all ages will learn how, during solar conjunction,
scientists use the relative positions of the Sun, Earth, and a
spacecraft to study the Sun's corona, or outer region.

Wednesday, August 2 (DOY 214):

An artist's rendition of the methane rain on Titan is Astronomy Picture
of the Day today

The data obtained by the six Huygens experiments is now archived in the
European Space Agency (ESA) Planetary Science Archive (PSA). A copy of
the archived data set is also available in the NASA Planetary Data
System (PDS). The data is now accessible by the scientific community and
the general public for downloads. This represents a major milestone in
the Huygens mission. Data from the Aerosol Collector and Pyrolyser
(ACP), Doppler Wind Experiment (DWE), Gas Chromatograph Mass
Spectrometer (GCMS), and Huygens Atmospheric Structure Instrument (HASI)
is accessible along with housekeeping data, calibration information, and
documentation necessary to understand and process the products, and to
carry out scientific analyses. Data from the Descent Imager Spectral
Radiometer (DISR), Surface Science Package (SSP), and the final Huygens
entry and descent trajectory data is to be released in the
September-October timeframe. To access the data, link to:
http://atmos.nmsu.edu/data_and_services/atmospheres_data/Huygens/Huygens.html

A Cassini Saturn Orbit Insertion +2 Years celebration was held in Von
Karman auditorium today for the Cassini Flight team. Talks were given by
the laboratory director Charles Elachi, and by two surprise celebrities,
Robert Picardo and Bill Nye. An additional presentation was given by
Outreach who read to the flight team some of the comments that the
public has sent to the Cassini web site letting us know how much they
appreciate what Cassini is doing, and looking forward to the next two
years of prime mission and extended mission after that. The flight team
says "THANKS" back to the public. We are looking forward to it too!

Your coffee table will never be the same. Outreach has promised the
flight team that they will let us know as books on Cassini/Saturn are
published. The first one is a beauty called Saturn: A New View in
hardcover. The pictures are phenomenal. The book has not yet been
released but may be ordered and will ship as it arrives at distributors.
See your local bookstore - either electronic or traditional.

The July 20 "Cassini Real-time Operations" presentation from the Von
Karman Lecture Series is online at the JPL public website as a
RealPlayer downloadable: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/events

Wrap up:

The most recent spacecraft telemetry was acquired on Wednesday, August
2, from the Goldstone tracking complex. The Cassini spacecraft is in an
excellent state of health and all subsystems are operating normally.

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 Spsce 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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