The Palm Beach Post

Spacecraft to dive through Saturn moon’s vapor and frozen particles

- By Marcia Dunn Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL — The Cassini spacecraft is about to get an icy shower as it orbits Saturn.

Cassini today will storm through a jet of water vapor and frozen particles erupting from the south pole of Enceladus, one of Saturn’s many moons. The spacecraft will zoom within 30 miles of the pole, providing the best sampling yet of its undergroun­d ocean.

Cassini will be traveling 19,000 mph, so it should take just an instant to penetrate the plume.

A global liquid ocean is believed to exist beneath the frozen crust of 300-mile-wide Enceladus. Today’s dive will be the deepest one yet through the continuous plumes, making the enterprise a bit riskier than usual.

Launched in 1997, Cassini is not equipped to detect life, but scientists hope the flflyby will provide clues as to the possibilit­y of it. NASA program scientist Curt Niebur considers it “a very big step in a new era of exploring ocean worlds in our solar system.”

Other probable extraterre­strial ocean worlds: Saturn’s largest moon, Titan; Jupiter’s moons, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto; and possibly dwarf planets Pluto and Ceres, among others.

“These are worlds with huge bodies of liquid water underneath their surfaces, bodies with great potential to provide oases for life throughout our solar system,” Nie- bur said. “It’s a journey in understand­ing about what makes a world habitable and where we might fifind life, and where we might one day live ourselves.”

Researcher­s are eager to nail down the chemical makeup of Enceladus’ plumes. They also hope to confifirm whether the eruptions are tight columns or curtains of jets running along fractures in the south pole.

In particular, the spacecraft will be looking to identify hydrogen molecules in the plume, which would help quantify hydrotherm­al activity occurring on the ocean flfloor. That, in turn, would help characteri­ze the potential for life in the slightly salty ocean.

If life exists — and more missions would be needed for confifirma­tion — it might range from microscopi­c algae to little fifish, the scientists said.

Spilker expects it will take a week to get a fifirst look at the scientifif­ic data and many more weeks for a proper analysis.

Close-up pictures of Enceladus should be ready much sooner, however. Cassini will snap pictures of Enceladus before, during and after the close encounter.

The images will be out of focus because of Cassini’s speed, but the team hopes to remove the blurs and have some dramatic shots by Thursday night or Friday.

This will be the 21st flflyby of Enceladus by Cassini.

“It’s not our last, but arguably this one is going to be our most dramatic,” said project manager Earl Maize.

Cassini has come closer to Enceladus — skimming 15½ miles above the surface in 2008 — but never dipped so low through a plume.

Scientists were tempted to flfly even lower, but did not want to waste fuel. Cassini’s orbit around Saturn will not be disturbed by the plume penetratio­n, they asserted. The U.S.-European spacecraft has two years of life remaining before it plunges into Saturn’s atmosphere and vaporizes.

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY NASA ?? Jets of ice, water vapor and organic compounds spray from the south pole of Saturn’s moon Enceladus in this image from the Cassini spacecraft taken in November 2009. Cassini will get within 30 miles of the pole today.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY NASA Jets of ice, water vapor and organic compounds spray from the south pole of Saturn’s moon Enceladus in this image from the Cassini spacecraft taken in November 2009. Cassini will get within 30 miles of the pole today.

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