U.S. spacecraft to take slingshot dive
inside Saturn’s rings
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[April 24, 2017]
By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - NASA's
Cassini spacecraft soared past Saturn's biggest moon for the last time
on Saturday, tapping its gravity to slingshot into a series of
exploratory dives inside the planet's rings, followed by a final fatal
plunge into the gas giant.
After nearly 20 years of traveling in space, Cassini used the
gravitational tug of Titan, a moon resembling primordial Earth, to hurl
itself into a new orbit that will pass through an unexplored region
between Saturn's cloud tops and its rings.
The spacecraft is expected to make the first of 22 dives between the
planet and its rings on Wednesday. During the last dive on Sept. 15,
Cassini is slated to destroy itself by flying directly into Saturn’s
crushing atmosphere.
Cassini's final run was set into motion early on Saturday by its 127th
and final pass by Titan, the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space
Administration said.
At its closest approach, NASA projections had Cassini flying 608 miles
(979 km) above Titan, zipping by at a relative speed of 13,000 miles per
hour (21,000 km per hour),
"Titan's gravity will bend Cassini's orbit around Saturn, shrinking it
slightly, so that instead of passing just outside the rings, the
spacecraft will begin its finale dives which pass just inside the
rings," NASA said in a statement on Wednesday.
During the dives, Cassini will measure how much ice and other materials
are in the rings and determine their chemical composition. That
information will help scientists learn how the rings formed.
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This illustration of NASA's Cassini spacecraft about to make one of
its dives between Saturn and its innermost rings as part of the
mission's grand finale. Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech via REUTERS
Cassini also will study Saturn's atmosphere and take measurements to
determine the size of the planet's rocky core.
Cassini has been probing Saturn, the sixth planet from the sun, and
its entourage of 62 known moons since July 2004, but is running low
on fuel.
NASA plans to crash the spacecraft into Saturn to avoid any chance
Cassini could someday collide with Titan, the ocean-bearing moon
Enceladus or any other moon that has the potential to support
indigenous microbial life.
By destroying the spacecraft, NASA will ensure that any hitchhiking
Earth microbes still alive on Cassini will not contaminate the moons
for future study.
(Reporting by Irene Klotz; Editing by Letitia Stein and Jonathan
Oatis)
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