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Cassini
The Cassini spacecraft is a scientific platform designed to perform an in-depth study of the Saturnian system. After insertion into its orbit about Saturn in 2004, Cassini will perform detailed studies of Saturn's atmosphere, magnetosphere, rings and several of its moons. Chief among the goals is a thorough characterization of the large moon, Titan. Titan's surface will be mapped using synthetic aperture radar and its atmosphere will be investigated by the ESA build Huygens probe that will descend via parachute. Scientists and engineers from the US and 16 European
countries will participate in the mission.
Spacecraft
3-axis stabilized; power supplied by 3 RTG (628W at EOM); 4 meter HGA supporting S-, X-,Ku-, Ka-band signals, X-band telemetry at 249 kbps, 2 backup LGAs for emergency commanding; dual redundant flight computers; dual redundant 445N gimballed main engines (burning N2O4, MMH), 16 hydrazine ACS thrusters; redundant star sensors, sun sensors, HRG IRUs, reaction
wheels; active thermal control using RHUs, heaters, louvers; redundant solid-state recorder; high level of spacecraft autonomy and fault protection 2.7 meter dia. Huygens probe deployed by 3 pyrotechnic release bolts, 3 parachutes used to control
descent, heat shield uses AQ60 material developed by Aerospatiale, redundant S-band link (8 kbps max), lithium sulphur-dioxide (LiSO2) primary batteries, radar altimeter.
Payload
The experiments carried aboard the Cassini orbiter include: Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS), Cassini Radar, Radio Science Subsystem (RSS), Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer (INMS), Visible and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS), Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS), Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA), Radio and Plasma Wave Spectrometer (RPWS), Cassini Plasma
Spectrometer (CAPS), Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph (UVIS), Magnetospheric Imaging Instrument (MIMI), Dual Technique Magnetometer (MAG). The Huygens probe experiments include: Descent Imager and Spectral Radiometer, Huygens Atmospheric Strucutre Instrument, Gas Chromatograph and Mass Spectrometer, Aerosol Collector Pyrolyzer, Surface Science Package, and the Doppler Wind Experiment.
Country of Origin | United States |
Customer/User | NASA, ESA, ASI |
Manufacturer(s) | JPL |
Size | 6.7 meter high x 4 meter dia. cylinder |
Launch | Planned: October 6,1997 on Titan 4-Centaur |
Orbit | 2 gravity assist flybys of Venus (April 1998 at 300 km and June 1999 at 2267 km), then one by Earth (August 1999 at 500 km) and one by Jupiter (December 2000 at 10 million km). 30 loose elliptical orbits, each optimized for different observations |
Design Life | 7 years |
Related Sites | JPL Cassini Page |
Information in The Mission and Spacecraft Library is provided without
warranty or guarantee. USE AT YOUR OWN RISK.
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