Cassini Significant Events 10/12/11 - 10/18/11
Title: Cassini Significant Events 10/12/11 -
10/18/11
The most
recent spacecraft telemetry was acquired on Oct. 18 from the Deep
Space Network tracking complex at Madrid, Spain. The Cassini
spacecraft is in an excellent state of health and with the exception
of the CAPS instrument being powered off, all subsystems are operating
normally. Information on the present position and speed of the Cassini
spacecraft may be found on the "Present Position" page at:
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/presentposition/.
Wednesday, Oct. 12 (DOY 285)
A beautiful image of Saturn's rings forming a sundial on the planet's
surface was Astronomy Picture of the Day today. It is available
at:
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap111012.html.
An encounter strategy meeting was held today to cover the period
between Oct. 19 and Nov. 6, Enceladus encounters E15 and E16, and
maneuvers 296-298 in S70.
The S71 Science Planning and Sequence Team (SPST) leads held a project
tag-up meeting today to discuss the potential impact of incomplete DSN
resource allocations by the Final Sequence Integration and Validation
(FSIV) Sequence Change Request (SCR) need date later this month.
The Spacecraft Operations Office (SCO) agreed to plan real-time
commands once final allocations are available in late November in
order to protect high priority data such as T80 and the Saturn
periapsis data.
Today the Attitude and Articulation Control Subsystem (AACS) control
mode was changed from Reaction Wheel Assembly (RWA) to Reaction
Control Subsystem (RCS) for solar conjunction. The attitude control
system went into low rate mode for the first time since a flight
software patch was loaded on July 7, 2011, to change the low rate
timer from 10 minutes to 40 minutes.
Thursday, Oct. 13 (DOY 286)
Today the spacecraft passed through the mid-point of solar conjunction
with a minimum Sun-Earth-Probe (SEP) angle of 2.2 degrees.
Ranging data was not used for navigation due to expected biases and
the Doppler data was significantly de-weighted. Tracking data should
be back to normal by Monday, Oct. 24, when the SEP angle rises above
10 degrees.
Target Working Team and Orbiter Science Team (TWT/OST) integrated
products for S73, covering orbits 164 through 168 in April 2012
through June 2012, were delivered today. The integrated products
include the first inclined revs of IN-1.
The Instrument Operations System/Multi Mission Image Processing
Laboratory (IOS/MIPL) Kerberos server was upgraded to IOS D40 today,
with no interruption to operations.
Friday, Oct. 14 (DOY 287)
Cassini Outreach and the JPL Public Service Office supported Pasadena
ArtNight with two Art/Science activities at Pasadena's Kidspace
Museum. Over 1,000 kids took home their own chalk Saturn moon
drawings and Solar System/Constellation art and stories. This is
a free evening event held in the fall, consisting of art, music and
entertainment as Pasadena's most prominent arts and cultural
institutions swing open their doors to the community.
Saturday, Oct. 15 (DOY 288)
The Downlink Ground System (DGS) team successfully completed testing
of Acelog V2.0.1 in preparation for an upcoming Delivery Coordination
Meeting (DCM) scheduled for Thursday, Oct. 27. The DGS team also
took over maintenance responsibility of the Instrument Operations (IO)
Gap Summary Tool, a tool that identifies data gaps, by either Earth
Received Time (ERT) or Spacecraft Event Time (SCET), that are greater
than the specified time delta between adjacent records from an input
file.
Sunday, Oct. 16 (DOY 289)
This week in science continued from last week with the spacecraft
remaining Earth-pointed during solar conjunction when the
Sun-Earth-Spacecraft angle is less than 3 degrees. After Cassini
exited solar conjunction, the Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph (UVIS),
the Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) and the Visual and Infrared
Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) performed a 12 hour observation of
Saturn's aurora, and the Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS), CIRS and
VIMS performed two monitoring observations of Titan. Next up is the
Enceladus (E15) flyby on Oct. 19.
Monday, Oct. 17 (DOY 290)
The main engine cover was closed today; performance was normal.
Tuesday, Oct. 18 (DOY 291)
A feature story called "Orion's Belt Lights Up Cassini's View of
Enceladus" is available on the Cassini web site. It
describes how the Cassini spacecraft will take advantage of the
position of two of the three stars in Orion's belt when the spacecraft
flies by Enceladus on Wed., Oct. 19. As the hot, bright stars
pass behind the moon's icy jets, Cassini's ultraviolet imaging
spectrograph will acquire a two-dimensional view of these dramatic
plumes of water vapor and icy material erupting from the moon's
southern polar region. This flyby is the mission's first-ever
opportunity to probe the jets with two stars simultaneously, a dual
stellar occultation. For images and more information on this
subject, link to:
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/cassinifeatures/feature20111018/.
The next maneuver, Orbit Trim Maneuver (OTM) 296, the E15 cleanup
maneuver, is scheduled to execute on Oct. 20. OTM-297, targeting
the 500 km altitude Enceladus 16 flyby on November 6, is scheduled for
Oct. 28.
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