Cassini Significant Events for 02/09/06 - 02/15/06

Cassini Significant Events
for 02/09/06 - 02/15/06

The most recent spacecraft telemetry was acquired Wednesday, February
15, from the Madrid tracking stations. The Cassini spacecraft is in an
excellent state of health and is operating normally. Information on the present position and speed of the Cassini spacecraft may be found on the
“Present Position” web page located at http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/operations/present-position.cfm .

Thursday, February 9 (DOY 040):
The Mission Support and Services Office led a discussion on the issues
and processes related to regenerated spacecraft clock/spacecraft event
time (SCLK/SCET) files at the Cassini Design Team meeting. Topics included the history and current implementation of the SCEGEN software and identified the current limitations of the system. Further discussion with personnel from the Spacecraft Operations Office, Navigation, and Radar teams to identify an updated SCLK/SCET strategy is planned.

Two schools on opposite sides of Canada held complementary Saturn
viewing and Night Sky Watching events on February 9. Students and families at Airdrie McCall School in Alberta and their partner school in Almonte, Ontario, participated. There were 20 viewers in the West and 30 viewers in the East. These events serve to start conversations between the students about what can be seen at either end of the country. A Saturn Observation Campaign (SOC) member in Airdrie, Alberta, Canada, coordinated the event.

A member of Cassini Outreach was in Perris CA this afternoon and
evening for a Saturn telescope night at Columbia Elementary School - named after the space shuttle and the astronauts who lost their lives. Four telescopes were provided for the event and the kids and one teacher operated them. One hundred fifty children and their parents attended and observed the moon, Saturn and the Beehive cluster.

Friday, February 10 (DOY 041):
As in each of the previous weeks of this sequence, part of the time was
devoted to instrument calibration. This week the Magnetometer
Subsystem (MAG) calibrated its boom alignment to check for changes with respect to the spacecraft axes. Accurate knowledge of sensor orientation is necessary for magnetic field measurement accuracy.

This was a productive week for imaging of satellites with 76
observations of 16 bodies. Orbit determination images were taken of Atlas, Pallene, Calypso, Epimetheus, Janus, Helene, Prometheus, Pandora, Telesto, Pan, Methone, and Polydeuces. A transit of Mimas across Tethys was captured, and Dione and Enceladus were the subjects of optical navigation images.

Two of the observations this week were quite lengthy. The Imaging
Science Subsystem (ISS) and the Visible and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) spent twenty-eight hours searching for a direct observation of lightning in Saturn’s atmosphere. Investigating the sources and nature of lightning on Saturn can tell scientists more about the atmosphere and wind velocities on the planet.

The S20 Science Operations Plan (SOP) Update process completed today.
The product was handed off to the sequence leads for the kickoff of the
final development process.

Files were radiated to the spacecraft today to modify an instrument
expanded block file for the Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA), and to patch the flight software for the Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS). Both files have been registered and are active on-board the spacecraft. The CDA file will begin execution on Monday, February 13, and the CIRS file will execute on Wednesday, February 15.

The Titan 11,12, 13, and 14 preview meeting hosted by the Titan Orbiter
Science Team (TOST) was held today. The main emphasis of the meeting
focused on first time events by the Radio Science Subsystem as well as
goals regarding the atmosphere of Titan.

A Cassini Pyro Valve 40/41 review was held today. This was in preparation for the Monopropellant Tank Assembly (MTA) recharge activity planned for April 10, 2006.

Saturday, February 11 (DOY 042):

The annual ACS Inertial Reference Unit (IRU) calibration was performed
on February 11 and 12. This was an ACS-centric calibration, where the
spacecraft turned through large angles. Other calibrations are done throughout the year, but are piggybacked onto smaller turns. The calibration executed nominally. The per-axis biases and misalignment
errors are better than the requirements. The next piggyback calibration will be on July 28, 2006.

Today the Astronomical Observatory in San Juan Talpa, El Salvador,
opened its doors for people to enjoy observations of Saturn. The activity
began at 6:30 pm with a Saturn lecture, detailing the latest discoveries of
Cassini.
Later people utilized the telescope of the observatory to observe
Saturn and some of its moons. Additional telescopes from some members of ASTRO were installed on the north terrace of the observatory.

Sunday, February 12 (DOY 043):

On Sunday the Ulysses Project contacted Cassini to ask to use part of
our DSS-14 support to accomplish their commanding. The S-band transmitter at their own station, DSS-24 had been declared red. After obtaining concurrence from the sequence leads, Spacecraft Operations Office, and the Navigation team, Cassini negotiated to use the DSS-24 X-band transmitter to ensure coherent Doppler coverage for a scheduled reaction wheel assembly bias activity, and gave up 60 minutes of DSS-14 during 165kbps telemetry playback. As it turned out, the actual time was from 2006/044-05:29:56 (ERT) to 2006/044-06:31:23 (ERT). The total outage for Cassini was ~30 minutes.

Spacecraft Periodic Engineering Maintenance (PEM) B was successfully
performed today. This activity “exercised” mechanical parts of the
Engine Gimbal Actuators, and scrubbed the memory in the Backdoor Assisted Load Format Injection Loader.

The Saturn Observation Campaign (SOC) is alive and well in the
Netherlands. A charter member of the SOC submitted this report of their activities: “Every Sunday at 5 o’olock we have our Saturn Mission Film, still based on the Ring World, in our planetarium dome of the Europlanetarium in Genk, Belgium. After that we go up into the cupola to look with our telescope for Saturn where I will tell 26th of Feb. about the Cassini-Huygens mission.”

Monday, February 13 (DOY 044):

The CDS Command Loss Timer (CLT) Memory Corruption flight software
patch was approved at a change control board meeting today in preparation for uplink May 8-11. This patch corrects a code error found last September in the execution of the “set Command Loss Timer” command. The error was discovered when the CLT was set back for Orbit Trim Maneuver 31. This resulted in data lost for the Titan 7 encounter. A patch to restore normal operations was issued on September 15 to correct the then current situation. The delivery of the patch today fixes the code.

Tuesday, February 14 (DOY 045):

Reference Trajectory update status and plans were discussed today in a
follow-up meeting to the Mission Planning Forum last week. Scientists and
the flight team are narrowing down the options and will make a decision
on which trajectory to select next week.

The radio and plasma wave science (RPWS) instrument on board Cassini
has captured radio emissions believed to come from a large lightning storm that occurred on January 23 and 24 at Saturn. The sounds are similar to the crackles and pops one hears on an AM radio during a thunderstorm on Earth.
Those radio emissions were converted into an audio file, and are now
available as a Podcast. To access the files go to:
https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/indexPod.cfm or
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/home/index.cfm or
https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/podcast/saturn-lightning/ .

Wednesday, February 15 (DOY 046):

A file was uplinked to the spacecraft for Radio Science today to power
cycle the Ka-band Translator On/Off and S-Band ON/OFF for testing purposes. The file has been registered and will begin execution on DOY 050T22:46:59.
A VIMS movie showing a rotating Titan in infrared light is Astronomy
Picture of the Day today.

Wrap up:
Check out the Cassini web site at http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov for the
latest press releases and images.

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the
European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Cassini-Huygens mission for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, Washington, D.C. JPL designed, developed and assembled the Cassini orbiter.