HUYGENS PROBE ARRIVES AT TITAN
MAUNA KEA (January 14, 2005) The Huygens probe impacted Titan's atmosphere
at 09:06 GMT Friday morning, with an expected landing on Titan's mysterious
surface three hours later. This near-infrared image shows Titan at the
moment Huygens reached its target.
"Although no disturbances in Titan's atmosphere were detected, the observations
provide the best images that characterize the satellite at the moment
of probe entry", says Antonin Bouchez, a staff member at the Keck observatory,
who was leading the observing effort.
"It was worth getting up in the middle of the night for this historic
moment", says Fred Chaffee, director of the Keck Observatory, "despite
the bad weather on the mountain". Winds were blowing at 40-50 mph, while
the mountain top itself was still cloaked with snow and ice from a recent
storm. Other team members that particpated in the observations were David
LeMignant from the Keck Observatory, Imke de Pater, a professor at the
University of California at Berkeley, and Michael Brown, a professor at
Caltech.
Titan is of particular interest to scientists because it is the only
moon in our solar system with a dense, methane-rich, nitrogen
atmosphere, reminiscent of our own atmosphere here on Earth. The
moon is cloaked in a thick, smog-like haze produced by the breakup
of methane by sunlight. Further study of this moon could provide
clues to planetary formation and evolution and, perhaps, about the
early days of Earth as well.
To get a closer look at Titan, scientists from three different
international space agencies developed the Cassini-Huygens mission,
a spacecraft orbiter that arrived in Saturn's orbit in July 2004
after a seven-year voyage. The four-year mission will include 70
orbits around the ringed planet with an array of instruments to
study the planet, its rings and its 30 known moons.
The Huygen's probe detached from Cassini on Christmas Eve, Dec. 24th,
2004. The probe has since been falling to Titan and entered the atmosphere
shortly after midnight, local time on Friday morning (09:06 GMT) January
14, 2005. Three sets of parachutes were to slow the probe and to provide
a stable platform for scientific measurements. Instruments on board will
collect information about the atmosphere's chemical composition and the
clouds surrounding Titan during its 2-2.5 hour descent. The data will
be radioed to the Cassini orbiter, which will then relay the data to Earth.
Near-infrared images were taken from the W. M. Keck Observatory with
the near infrared camera, NIRC2, and the adaptive optics system at the
time of probe entry. The team had planned imaging sequences to look for
thermal emissions or condensates at the probe entry site.
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Image credit: W. M. Keck Observatory
Image credit: W. M. Keck Observatory

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