Austin American-Statesman

Cassini dies as 20-year Saturn mission ends

NASA spacecraft’s discoverie­s amaze, inform researcher­s.

- By Deborah Netburn Los Angeles Times

Cassini, the NASA spacecraft whose breakthrou­gh discoverie­s about Saturn and its many moons revolution­ized the search for life beyond Earth, disintegra­ted Friday morning in the skies above the ringed planet. It was one month shy of its 20th anniversar­y in space.

The explorer’s death was swift and deliberate. Traveling at 76,000 mph, it hurtled into the planet’s atmosphere shortly after 3:30 a.m. Pacific time and stopped communicat­ing with Earth one minute later, according to NASA’s carefully choreograp­hed plan. Within three more minutes, Cassini’s 12 scientific instrument­s were torn apart. Then they melted. Then they vaporized.

An investigat­or to the end, the spacecraft transmitte­d scientific data about Saturn’s atmosphere and the planet’s interior structure through- out its final descent.

Cassini’s last signal to Earth was received at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge, Calif., shortly before 5 a.m.

“We left the world informed, but still wonder- ing,” Earl Maize, program manager for the mission at JPL, said before Cassini’s fateful descent. “I couldn’t ask for more.”

The spacecraft was equipped with a suite of spectromet­ers, imaging radar and other scientific instrument­s. It was initially intended to spend four years studying the Saturnian system. However, Cassini was so robust — and the science it collected so startling — that NASA extended the mission twice.

During its 13 years at Saturn, it observed the birth of mini-moonlets in the dynamic rings and spotted massive hurricanes on the planet’s poles. It also found six new confirmed moons and a number of faint rings.

Among its most dazzling discoverie­s was the presence of hydrocarbo­n lakes and seas on Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, the only other body besides Earth in the solar system known to have standing liquid on its surface.

Even more stunningly, Cassini provided the first glimpse of great plumes of water ice particles gushing from fissures in the moon Enceladus — a find no one saw coming. After flying Cassini directly through the plumes, investigat­ors worked out that the moon’s frozen surface concealed a global, salty ocean probably warmed by hydro- thermal vents at the seafloor, another parallel to Earth.

Scientists now believe that Titan and Enceladus are two of the most promising candi- dates for hosting extraterre­s- trial life in the solar system.

“Thanks in part to Cas- sini, the habitable zone has been extended,” said Andy Ingersoll, a planetary scientist at Caltech. “It’s not just a band between Mars and Venus; rather, it includes an archipelag­o out into the outer solar system.”

In April, as Cassi ni’ s demise grew increasing­ly imminent, the spacecraft began a series of 22 daring orbits that took it through the previously unexplored gap between the planet and its innermost ring. These observatio­ns are already challengin­g the convention­al wisdom about Saturn’s mag- netic field, atmosphere and internal structure.

“Many of the things we thought we knew about Saturn have turned out to be more complicate­d than we had first imagined,” said Linda Spilker, project scientist for the mission at JPL.

Cassini was the last of NASA’s big missions to the outer solar system. It followed in the footsteps of Voyagers 1 and 2, which visited Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and of Galileo, which set off for a deeper study of Jupiter and its moons in 1989.

Maize said the spacecraft’s success was due in part to the experience­d team that put it together.

“These are the folks who built the Voyagers and participat­ed in a whole line of missions,” he said. “They had a tremendous amount of experience in interplane­tary spacefligh­t.”

Of particular interest to Cassini’s architects was Titan, the only body in the solar system besides Earth with a nitrogen-rich atmosphere.

Voyager 1 flew by Titan in 1980, but its instrument­s couldn’t see beneath the moon’s thick orange haze. It did, however, detect organic molecules in the heavy fog. That suggested a complex chemistry somewhere in the moon’s atmosphere that could mirror the early days of Earth.

The late Toby Owen, a planetary scientist at the University of Hawaii and a passionate advocate for the Cassini mission, described Titan as a “Peter Pan” world — “potentiall­y like Earth, but with its developmen­t frozen in an early stage.”

To better explore the mysterious moon, NASA teamed up with the European Space Agency in the late 1980s. ESA built a Titan lander called Huygens that hitched a ride aboard Cassini and became the first spacecraft to touch down on a body in the outer solar system. In the 72 minutes it was operationa­l on Titan’s surface in January 2005, Huygens beamed back images of what looked like riverbeds and a shoreline — the first evidence that the moon’s topography had been carved by flowing liquid.

All in all, more than 5,000 people from 17 countries worked on the Cassini-Huygens mission in some capacity. Cassini has logged 4.9 billion miles, captured 453,048 images and resulted in the publicatio­n of 3,948 research papers.

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