Saturn mission goes into overtime
Cassini orbiter begins two-year extension, focusing on moons and equinox

MSNBC

updated 7:08 p.m. CT, Tues., July. 1, 2008

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25484273/


The multibillion-dollar Cassini orbiter has officially ended its four-year 
primary mission to Saturn — ushering in a two-year extended mission that 
will focus on the ringed planet's mysterious moons.

The primary mission began when the spacecraft entered Saturnian orbit on 
July 1, 2004 (or June 30 in some time zones). Cassini produced the first 
pictures that pierced the haze surrounding Titan, Saturn's biggest moon. 
The orbiter also sent down a European-built piggyback lander called 
Huygens, which beamed back pictures from Titan's surface. The 
Cassini-Huygens observations revealed that Titan was laced with hydrocarbon 
seas and channels.

Cassini also discovered geysers of ice spewing from Enceladus, another 
Saturnian moon that may harbor subsurface oceans and perhaps even life.

Titan and Enceladus are the primary targets for Cassini's extended mission, 
which NASA approved in April. Cassini will also monitor seasonal effects on 
Titan and Saturn, explore Saturn's magnetic field and witness Saturn's 
equinox on Aug. 11, 2009, when sunlight will pass directly through the 
plane of the planet's rings.

The spacecraft's new agenda has been dubbed the Cassini Equinox Mission in 
honor of the astronomical event, which occurs roughly every 15 years.

Cassini's $3.3 billion primary mission was funded by NASA, the European 
Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. NASA is picking up the bill for 
the $160 million extension. Officials have said the mission could be 
extended yet again if Cassini was still in good working order in mid-2010.

"We've had a wonderful mission and a very eventful one in terms of the 
scientific discoveries we've made, and yet an uneventful one when it comes 
to the spacecraft behaving so well," Bob Mitchell, Cassini program manager 
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in a statement. "We are 
incredibly proud to have completed all of the objectives we set out to 
accomplish when we launched. We answered old questions and raised quite a 
few new ones, and so our journey continues."

JPL said that Bob Pappalardo, a geologist at the lab in Pasadena, Calif., 
would step into the role of Cassini project scientist for the extended 
mission. He replaces Dennis Matson, who will be turning his focus to future 
flagship space missions, according to NASA.

Carolyn Porco of the Colorado Space Science Institute, leader of Cassini's 
imaging team, said that the orbiter was "a robust and capable craft and 
will continue its work with ease."

"To explore a planetary system very much unlike our own is an occasion like 
no other," she said in a statement. "It has been hard going and exhausting 
for sure, but in return we have been rewarded beyond all imagining. Without 
equivocation, we on Cassini can proudly proclaim: Mission accomplished!"

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25484273/


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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