• Huygens: 'Ground Truth' From an Alien Moon

    From baalke@1:2320/100 to sci.space.news on Thu Feb 16 21:07:42 2017
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    http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=6718

    Huygens: 'Ground Truth' From an Alien Moon
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    January 11, 2017

    2005 Historic Descent to Titan Revisited

    [Video]
    After a two-and-a-half-hour descent, the metallic, saucer-shaped spacecraft came to rest with a thud on a dark floodplain covered in cobbles of water
    ice, in temperatures hundreds of degrees below freezing. The alien probe worked frantically to collect and transmit images and data about its environs -- in mere minutes its mothership would drop below the local horizon,
    cutting off its link to the home world and silencing its voice forever.

    Although it may seem the stuff of science fiction, this scene played out
    12 years ago on the surface of Saturn's largest moon, Titan. The "aliens"
    who built the probe were us. This was the triumphant landing of ESA's
    Huygens probe.

    Huygens, a project of the European Space Agency, traveled to Titan as
    the companion to NASA's Cassini spacecraft, and then separated from its mothership on Dec. 24, 2004, for a 20-day coast toward its destiny at
    Titan.

    The probe sampled Titan's dense, hazy atmosphere as it slowly rotated
    beneath its parachutes, analyzing the complex organic chemistry and measuring winds. It also took hundreds of images during the descent, revealing bright, rugged highlands that were crosscut by dark drainage channels and steep ravines. The area where the probe touched down was a dark, granular surface, which resembled a dry lakebed.

    Thoughts on Huygens

    Today the Huygens probe sits silently on the frigid surface of Titan,
    its mission concluded mere hours after touchdown, while the Cassini spacecraft continues the exploration of Titan from above as part of its mission to
    learn more about Saturn and its moons. Now in its dramatic final year,
    the spacecraft's own journey will conclude on September 15 with a fateful plunge into Saturn's atmosphere.

    With the mission heading into its home stretch, Cassini team members and
    NASA leaders look back fondly on the significance of Huygens:

    "The Huygens descent and landing represented a major breakthrough in our exploration of Titan as well as the first soft landing on an outer-planet moon. It completely changed our understanding of this haze-covered ocean world."
    -- Linda Spilker, Cassini project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
    Pasadena, California

    "The Huygens images were everything our images from orbit were not. Instead
    of hazy, sinuous features that we could only guess were streams and drainage channels, here was incontrovertible evidence that at some point in Titan's history -- and perhaps even now -- there were flowing liquid hydrocarbons
    on the surface. Huygens' images became a Rosetta stone for helping us interpret our subsequent findings on Titan."
    -- Carolyn Porco, Cassini imaging team lead at Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colorado

    "Cassini and Huygens have shown us that Titan is an amazing world with
    a landscape that mimics Earth in many ways. During its descent, the Huygens probe captured views that demonstrated an entirely new dimension to that comparison and highlights that there is so much more we have yet to discover. For me, Huygens has emphasized why it is so important that we continue
    to explore Titan."
    -- Alex Hayes, a Cassini scientist at Cornell University, Ithaca, New
    York

    "Twelve years ago, a small probe touched down on an orangish, alien world
    in the outer solar system, marking humankind's most distant landing to
    date. Studying Titan helps us tease out the potential of habitability
    of this tiny world and better understand the chemistry of the early Earth."
    -- Jim Green, director of planetary science at NASA Headquarters, Washington

    A collection of Huygens' top science findings is available from ESA at:

    http://sci.esa.int/huygens-titan-science-highlights

    The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA (European Space Agency) and the Italian Space Agency. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of Caltech in Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. JPL designed, developed and assembled
    the Cassini orbiter.

    More information about Cassini:

    http://www.nasa.gov/cassini

    http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov

    News Media Contact
    Preston Dyches
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
    818-394-7013
    preston.dyches@jpl.nasa.gov

    Markus Bauer
    ESA Communications Office, Villanueva de la Ca+ada, Spain
    Tel: 31 71 565 6799 / Mobile: 31 61 594 3 954
    markus.bauer@esa.int

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