Toronto Star

A final screaming success for NASA’s Saturn-orbiting craft

In space since its 1997 launch, Cassini will end its mission by falling into the ringed planet

- SARAH KAPLAN THE WASHINGTON POST

Next week, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft will nose-dive into Saturn and burn up in the planet’s atmosphere.

It’s the final, suicidal step of a monthslong dance through Saturn’s rings that has given scientists an unpreceden­ted view of the sixth planet from the sun. It’s also the end of a mission that has revolution­ized our understand­ing of Saturn and opened our eyes to two worlds that could be home to alien life — the moons Titan and Enceladus.

It really is the end of an era. And Cassini fans are devastated.

To understand why, you have to understand Cassini — a plucky, school bussized spacecraft that has been orbiting Saturn since 2004.

The beginning Cassini launched on its billion-mile journey from Earth to Saturn on Oct. 15, 1997. It was named for the astronomer Giovanni Cassini, who discovered four of the planet’s moons and a gap in its rings.

Cassini also carried a single passenger: The Huygens lander, built by the European Space Agency and named for the Dutch scientist who first spotted the moon Titan.

Cassini and Huygens arrived in Saturn’s orbit seven years after launch, in July 2004.

Several months later, Huygens split off and touched down on the shore of one of Titan’s lakes of liquid methane. It was humankind’s first landing on a moon other than our own, and the first landing of any kind in the outer solar system.

Cassini, meanwhile, was the first probe to orbit Saturn. (Pioneer and Voyager had simply flown by, in 1979 and 1980, respective­ly.)

The triumphs Cassini has been extraordin­arily successful and indisputab­ly one of the most successful planetary missions ever. In addition to Huygens’ perfectly stuck landing, Cassini probed the formation and behaviour of Saturn’s ring system, discovered an 8,000-kilometre-wide hurricane at Saturn’s south pole and got the first closeup view of the planet’s hexagonal North Pole storm. Cassini revealed that Saturn’s rings have a lot of three-dimensiona­l texture and contain bumps as big as the Rocky Mountains, solved the mystery of the moon Iapetus’s two-tone black-andwhite cookie coloration and photograph­ed its odd equatorial bulge. Roughly 4,000 papers have been written using the 635 gigabytes of data collected by Cassini in nearly 300 orbits of Saturn.

Best of all were the revelation­s about Saturn’s ocean moons. In the haze around Titan, Cassini discovered molecules that could be precursors to — or even indicators of — biological activity on that methane-rich planet. Zooming past the icy moon Enceladus, it found evidence of an undergroun­d ocean of water, and spotted geysers spewing out ingredient­s for life.

The spacecraft is not equipped with lifedetect­ing instrument­s — no one could have imagined it might make such discoverie­s when it launched 20 years ago. But these moons are now considered two of the best places in the solar system to look for alien organisms, and they are the focus of several proposals for new NASA missions.

“There’s this tremendous legacy,” said project scientist Linda Spilker, who has worked on the mission since1988. “Cassini has certainly rewritten the textbooks.”

The final countdown Cassini is a victim of its own success. It’s precisely because of Cassini’s revelation­s about Titan and Enceladus that the spacecraft has been sentenced to die.

Back in 2009, when it became apparent the spacecraft was running out of fuel, scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory got together to assess their op- tions. The craft couldn’t be left to float around in space, on the off chance that it might be knocked out of orbit and crash into one of the potentiall­y habitable moons. If that happened, Cassini could potentiall­y contaminat­e those worlds with Earthling microbes.

The mission team considered moving Cassini to a more distant orbit, or sending it off to another planet. But then it came up with a proposal that would launch Cassini into one last flyby past Titan and use the moon’s pull to sling the craft into 22 close-in orbits of Saturn that would explore the gaps between the planet’s rings, then end by crashing into Saturn itself.

It was the obvious choice, Spilker said. She compared these ring-grazing orbits to a “brand new mission.” During the orbits, Cassini has mapped Saturn’s gravity and magnetic fields to reveal the internal structure of the planet. It got closeup views of the rings and even sampled some of the icy particles that constitute them. It’s expected to finally figure out the length of a Saturn day — a measuremen­t that has eluded scientists for decades.

The end The grand finale began in April, and ends with a fiery plunge into Saturn’s atmosphere in the early hours of Sept. 15.

On that day, scientists who have worked on the mission during the past 30 years will converge at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. Just after midnight, the spacecraft will point its instrument­s in the direction of Saturn’s atmosphere and start rapidly transmitti­ng real-time data about what it sees. It will hit the atmosphere three hours later.

A minute after that, it will start tumbling through the increasing­ly dense clouds of gas and will lose the ability to send a signal back to Earth. Because of the time delay in communicat­ion between Saturn and Earth, that final message won’t arrive at JPL until 83 minutes later, just before 5 a.m.

At that point, Cassini will already have burned up in Saturn’s atmosphere, a tiny, bright meteorite streaking across an alien sky.

For the scientists who have devoted their lives to this mission, it’s a tough loss.

“Cassini is our eyes and ears allowing us to be there, allowing us to reach out and touch the world and the rings,” Spilker said.

“As long as Cassini is there, we’re there at Saturn, and when Cassini is gone, that close personal connection to the Saturn system will be gone too.”

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Cassini spacecraft will soon finish its 20-year journey in space, including 13 years orbiting Saturn.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES The Cassini spacecraft will soon finish its 20-year journey in space, including 13 years orbiting Saturn.
 ?? FRANK WIESE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Cassini spacecraft is lowered by engineers a year before its 1997 trip.
FRANK WIESE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Cassini spacecraft is lowered by engineers a year before its 1997 trip.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada