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Cassini
Spacecraft to Dive Into Water Plume of Saturn Moon
Monday, March 10, 2008
Credit:
NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
NASA's Cassini
spacecraft will make an unprecedented "in your face"
flyby of Saturn's moon Enceladus on Wed., March 12.
The
spacecraft, orchestrating its closest approach to date, will
skirt along the edges of huge Old-Faithful-like geysers erupting
from giant fractures on the south pole of Enceladus. Cassini will
sample scientifically valuable water-ice, dust and gas in the
plume.
The source of the geysers is of great interest to
scientists who think liquid water, perhaps even an ocean, may
exist in the area. While flying through the edge of the plumes,
Cassini will be approximately 200 kilometers (120 miles) from the
surface. At closest approach to Enceladus, Cassini will be only
50 kilometers (30 miles) from the moon.
"This daring
flyby requires exquisite technical finesse, but it has the
potential to revolutionize our knowledge of the geysers of
Enceladus. The Cassini mission team is eager to see the
scientific results, and so am I," said Alan Stern, associate
administrator of NASA's Science Mission Directorate,
Washington.
Scientists and mission personnel studying the
anatomy of the plumes have found that flying at these close
distances poses little threat to Cassini because, despite the
high speed of Cassini, the plume particles are small. The
spacecraft routinely crosses regions made up of dust-size
particles in its orbit around Saturn.
Cassini's cameras
will take a back seat on this flyby as the main focus turns to
the spacecraft's particle analyzers that will study the
composition of the plumes. The cameras will image Enceladus on
the way in and out, between the observations of the particle
analyzers.
Images will reveal northern regions of the
moon previously not captured by Cassini. The analyzers will
"sniff and taste" the plume. Information on the
density, size, composition and speed of the gas and the particles
will be collected.
"There are
two types of particles coming from Enceladus, one pure water-ice,
the other water-ice mixed with other stuff," said Sascha
Kempf, deputy principal investigator for Cassini's Cosmic Dust
Analyzer at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in
Heidelberg, Germany. "We think the clean water-ice particles
are being bounced off the surface and the dirty water-ice
particles are coming from inside the moon. This flyby will show
us whether this concept is right or wrong."
In 2005,
Cassini's multiple instruments discovered that this icy outpost
is gushing water vapor geysers out to a distance of three times
the radius of Enceladus. The moon is only 500 kilometers (310
miles) in diameter, but despite its petite size, it's one of the
most scientifically compelling bodies in our solar system. The
icy water particles are roughly one ten-thousandth of an inch, or
about the width of a human hair. The particles and gas escape the
surface at jet speed at approximately 400 meters per second (800
miles per hour). The eruptions appear to be continuous,
refreshing the surface and generating an enormous halo of fine
ice dust around Enceladus, which supplies material to one of
Saturn's rings, the E-ring.
Several gases, including water
vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, perhaps a little ammonia and
either carbon monoxide or nitrogen gas make up the gaseous
envelope of the plume.
"We want to know if there is a
difference in composition of gases coming from the plume versus
the material surrounding the moon. This may help answer the
question of how the plume formed," said Hunter Waite,
principal investigator for Cassini's Ion and Neutral Mass
Spectrometer at the Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio.
This is the first of four Cassini flybys of Enceladus
this year. In June, Cassini completes its prime mission, a
four-year tour of Saturn. Cassini's next flyby of Enceladus is
planned for August, well into Cassini's proposed extended
mission. Cassini will perform seven Enceladus flybys in its
extended mission. If this encounter proves safe, future passes
may bring the spacecraft even closer than this one. How close
Cassini will be allowed to approach will be determined based on
data from this flyby.
The Cassini-Huygens mission is a
cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the
Italian Space Agency. JPL manages the Cassini-Huygens mission for
NASA's Science Mission Directorate. The Cassini orbiter was
designed, developed and assembled at JPL.
Source:
NASA / JPL

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