Date: Fri, 24 Nov 2000 19:14:47 -0800 (PST)
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Subject: Huygens Helps Cassini To Meet Galileo At Jupiter
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ESA Science News
http://sci.esa.int

22 Nov 2000

Huygens helps Cassini to meet Galileo at Jupiter

As the Cassini spacecraft starts its approach of Jupiter, the Huygens Probe
and all its onboard instruments remain dormant. However, Huygens is not
going to be totally passive. The role of Huygens in acting as a sunshield will
be crucial in protecting Cassini's instruments from the heat of the Sun.

Helped on its way by an Earth swing-by in August 1999, the Cassini Orbiter
is now heading towards the outer Solar System for a final gravity-assisted
manoeuver at Jupiter. This final planetary swing-by is vital in acquiring the
velocity needed to reach Saturn, the final destination of the seven-year
interplanetary cruise. The ESA/NASA Cassini-Huygens spacecraft is now
approaching the giant planet. The closest approach to Jupiter will happen at
the end of December this year at a distance of ten million kilometres. Even
at such a vast distance the gravity of Jupiter will be sufficient to bend
Cassini-Huygens' trajectory and re-direct it to Saturn. All the scientists
involved in the Cassini-Huygens mission will remember 2000 as the year of
the approach, observation and flyby of Jupiter. Moreover, for the first time
ever, two spacecraft, namely Cassini and NASA's Galileo, will simultaneously
observe Jupiter.

Around the time of Cassini's closest approach, Galileo will be in the
magnetosphere, while Cassini will be in the Solar Wind. Huygens will also play
an important role in this encounter. The Huygens heat shield will be used to
shade the Orbiter and its instruments from the Sun's heat. Huygens has
happily been filling this role since early October 2000, as shown by the
changes in temperature of key Huygens parts, monitored by the Orbiter,
which are well within what the Probe is able to withstand (see Figure 2).

Except for short periods during manoeuvres, the Probe has been shadowed
by Cassini's High Gain Antenna, which until February 2000 had always been
pointed towards the Sun. The Probe is equipped with a robust thermal
subsystem, designed to maintain the temperature of the instruments within
the allowed range throughout the mission. On the other hand, the Probe
dissipates about 200 W of power during a Probe checkout, during which it
gets pretty warm inside (about 35 C). Because of the super-insulation, it
takes a few days for the Probe interior to cool down after a checkout. The
overall temperature variations from early January until end of September
2000 of the monitored key points in the Probe are illustrated in Figure 3.

Although the actual Jupiter flyby is scheduled for December 30 this year,
the instruments onboard Cassini have been collecting data on the giant
planet since early October. Prior to the closest approach, Cassini is outside
Jupiter's magnetosphere and is providing reference measurements on the
Solar Wind for Galileo, which in the meantime is flying inside Jupiter's
magnetic field. Through simultaneous collection of data from both
spacecraft, scientists will be able to observe, for the first time, both the
environment outside and that within the planetary magnetic field of a giant
gas planet. Jupiter's magnetosphere dynamics are believed to respond
to changes in Solar Wind conditions. The combined data from the two
spacecraft will bring a better understanding of how the Solar Wind interacts
with Jupiter's magnetic field. However, Cassini and Galileo will not be close
enough to see each other, even at the time of Cassini's closest approach to
Jupiter they will be separated by more than seven million kilometers.

Ground based telescopes will join Cassini and Galileo in studying Jupiter, in
particular in observing the planet in the radio window, and in mapping the
synchrotron emissions which are due to the interaction of energetic
electrons with Jupiter's intense magnetic field. Furthermore, the ESA/NASA
Hubble Space Telescope will be studying Jupiter's aurora in coordination with
Cassini, starting 20 days before the closest approach until 20 days after
the flyby.

The results of all these studies will greatly improve our understanding of the
largest planet in the Solar System, and for the second time after the Ulysses
Jupiter flyby in 1992, a significant European participation is distinguishing
itself in the observation of Jupiter and its environment. For now Huygens is
just a helper in this important moment in the history of the mission, but the
Probe is waiting patiently for it's big moment, which will be in four years
time
when it is released into the atmosphere of Titan, Saturn's enigmatic moon.

For further information please contact:

Jean-Pierre Lebreton,
ESA-Huygens Project Scientist
Estec, Noordwijk – The Netherlands
Tel: +31 71 565 3600
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

USEFUL LINKS FOR THIS STORY

* Jupiter observations schedule
  http://spdext.estec.esa.nl/content/doc/dd/25309_.htm
* NASA - Jupiter Millennium Flyby
  http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/jupiterflyby
* Ulysses science homepage
  http://helio.estec.esa.nl/ulysses/
* Huygens home page
  http://sci.esa.int/home/huygens/
* NASA's Galileo page
  http://galileo.jpl.nasa.gov/

IMAGE CAPTIONS:

[Figure 1:
http://sci.esa.int/content/searchimage/searchresult.cfm?aid=12&cid=12&ooid=2
5335]
Artist's impression of Cassini-Huygens at Saturn. Courtesy ESA / D. Ducros.

[Figure 2:
http://sci.esa.int/content/searchimage/searchresult.cfm?aid=12&cid=12&ooid=2
5325]
Huygens probe temperature Jupiter observations phase.

[Figure 3:
http://sci.esa.int/content/searchimage/searchresult.cfm?aid=12&cid=12&ooid=2
5326]
Huygens probe temperature monitoring since HGA-to-SUN attitude.


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