Los Angeles Times

Cassini nears its fiery end

After 13 years observing Saturn, spacecraft prepares to hurl itself into the ringed planet.

- DEBORAH NETBURN deborah.netburn @latimes.com Twitter: @DeborahNet­burn

After 13 years of observing Saturn, its rings and its myriad moons, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft is less than three weeks away from a fiery, brutal end.

Early in the morning on Sept. 15, the aging spacecraft will hurl itself into Saturn’s atmosphere at speeds of more than 75,000 mph.

It’s a deliberate death plunge from which it has no hope of returning.

Within three minutes of diving into Saturn’s tenuous upper layers, the two-storytall spacecraft will be torn apart. Then it will melt. Then it will vaporize. In the end, Cassini will become part of the very planet it has studied for more than a decade.

“I like to say it’s going out in a blaze of glory,” said Linda Spilker of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the project scientist for the mission.

“It will be trailblazi­ng until the very last second.”

Earth-bound astronomer­s will keep a close eye on the planet at the moment of Cassini’s death to see whether they can detect a small flare as the spacecraft burns up like a meteor in the Saturnian sky.

But they don’t expect to see much.

“The mass of Cassini is so small compared to the mass of the planet,” Spilker said. “And the plunge is happening on Saturn’s day side.”

She added that there is no fear that Cassini’s death dive will contaminat­e the ringed giant. Molecules from the spacecraft will quickly spread out across the planet, which is big enough to hold more than 700 Earths.

Still, Cassini’s suicide mission is not all gloom and doom. The spacecraft will venture deeper into Saturn’s atmosphere than ever before, collecting brand-new data and beaming it back to Earth up until the last seconds of its life.

“We are reconfigur­ing the spacecraft and turning Cassini into an atmospheri­c probe,” said Earl Maize, the mission’s program manager, who also works at JPL.

Cassini could make it as far as 120 miles into the Saturnian atmosphere before all its instrument­s cease to function, mission engineers said.

“I find great comfort that Cassini will continue teaching us until the very last second on Sept. 15,” said Curt Niebur, Cassini program scientist based at NASA’s headquarte­rs in Washington.

The flagship mission launched in 1997 and entered the Saturnian system in 2004.

Over the last 13 years it has discovered plumes of water ice on the moon Enceladus, confirmed the presence of methane and ethane lakes and rivers on Titan, watched the seasons change on Saturn, discovered six new moons and revealed complexiti­es in the planet’s rings that had never been seen before.

“We’ve rewritten the textbooks on Saturn,” Spilker said. “Literally, there are so many new books coming out.”

Although the spacecraft’s instrument­s continue to work flawlessly, its gas tank is nearing empty. Mission planners decided to crash Cassini into Saturn to avoid any risk of contaminat­ing Enceladus or Titan, two of Saturn’s moons that could harbor the ingredient­s necessary for life.

Beginning in April, Cassini began a series of orbits that took it speeding through the gap between the planet and its rings for the first time. This has allowed scientists to address new questions including the age of the rings and how quickly the planet’s interior is spinning.

By Sept. 15, the spacecraft will have completed 22 of these orbits to collect new data even as its end looms.

“Who knows what new mysteries the next two weeks will bring?” Spilker said.

 ?? Photograph­s by NASA/JPL-Caltech ?? IN THE END, NASA’s Cassini will become part of the very planet it has studied for more than a decade.
Photograph­s by NASA/JPL-Caltech IN THE END, NASA’s Cassini will become part of the very planet it has studied for more than a decade.
 ??  ?? CASSINI has watched the seasons change on Saturn, found plumes of water ice on its moon Enceladus, discovered six new moons and revealed complexiti­es in the planet’s rings that had never been seen before.
CASSINI has watched the seasons change on Saturn, found plumes of water ice on its moon Enceladus, discovered six new moons and revealed complexiti­es in the planet’s rings that had never been seen before.

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