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Radio link may hamper a Titan probe.


Parachuting through the orange haze of an alien moon, a small vehicle splashes down onto a frigid hydrocarbon sea. During the descent, its camera records the strange landscape while other detectors analyze the atmosphere's organic brew. Together, the data provide a glimpse of what conditions may have been like on Earth billions of years ago, just before life got its toehold.

That's the scene scientists hope to see in 4 years, when the Huygens probe The Huygens probe, supplied by the European Space Agency (ESA) and named after the Dutch 17th century astronomer Christiaan Huygens, is an atmospheric entry probe and lander carried to Saturn's moon Titan as part of the Cassini-Huygens mission.  is scheduled to separate from its mother craft, Cassini, and descend through the cloud-bedecked atmosphere of Titan, Saturn's largest moon. The mission could prove whether this moon harbors hydrocarbon seas (SN: 3/4/00, p. 156), which could provide the raw materials for life.

The scientists might be in for a disappointment, however. A communications problem, first detected in February and confirmed last month, could prevent Huygens from relaying some of its data.

The European Space Agency European Space Agency (ESA), multinational agency dedicated to the promotion, for exclusively peaceful purposes, of cooperation among European states in space research and technology.  (ESA 1. (architecture) ESA - Enterprise Systems Architecture.
2. (body) ESA - European Space Agency.
) announced Oct. 5 that the radio frequencies Huygens will transmit during its descent won't perfectly match those that can be received by Cassini, orbiting overhead. If technicians can't solve the problem, a precious 20 minutes or so of the probe's 2.5-hour descent into Titan's atmosphere could be lost.

"It's a serious hit to the mission," says Earl Maize, Cassini spacecraft operations manager See datacenter manager.  at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory “JPL” redirects here. For other uses, see JPL (disambiguation).

Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) is a NASA research center located in the cities of Pasadena and La CaƱada Flintridge, near Los Angeles, California, USA.
 in Pasadena, Calif. NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASA
 in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Independent U.S.
 operates Cassini, which during its tour of Saturn will briefly act as a relay for Huygens. ESA built the probe.

The communications mismatch will become problematic when Huygens parachutes through Titan's atmosphere and the relative motion between the probe and the orbiting Cassini rapidly changes. Akin to the changing pitch of an ambulance siren as the vehicle approaches and speeds away, the difference in the probe's speed relative to Cassini shifts the radio signals it transmits to higher or lower frequencies. Somehow the consequences of this well-known Doppler shift See Doppler effect.  were not fully taken into account by engineers before Cassini's 1997 launch.

This week, at ESA's operations center in Darmstadt, Germany, scientists met to discuss the communications flaw. One solution may be to slow the Cassini craft during the 2.5 hours in which the probe descends. That would reduce the Doppler shift, permitting the craft to receive more of the probe's radio signals. An ESA investigations board will release a full report on Dec. 15.

The flaw "is not fatal and can be rectified with modifications," says Cassini scientist Carolyn C. Porco of the University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service.  in Tucson. The challenge, she notes, is to make modifications that don't compromise other parts of the Saturn mission.
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Title Annotation:Saturn's largest moon
Author:Cowen, R.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4E
Date:Oct 21, 2000
Words:431
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