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Cassini to live-stream its final moments in Saturn鈥檚 atmosphere

By Leah Crane

13 September 2017

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Last days: Saturn will keep its remaining secrets after Cassini’s death plunge

NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI

In a few days, we will receive our last signal from the Cassini spacecraft. But for a few of hours before that, the spacecraft will live-stream a deluge of data to Earth in its last hurrah before burning up in Saturn鈥檚 atmosphere.

Over the past month, Cassini has been dipping into the very top of the Saturn鈥檚 atmosphere on its last few passes by the planet. It has measured the particles, radiation and magnetic field there. Now, it鈥檚 diving right in and capturing data deeper in Saturn鈥檚 atmosphere than any spacecraft has ever ventured.

Cassini’s grand finale:

Join us as we count down to the fiery end of the Cassini spacecraft’s mission to Saturn

鈥淲e鈥檒l be about 2000 kilometres lower than we鈥檝e ever been, and then the atmosphere will eventually swamp us and overcome us and the spacecraft will melt,鈥 says Julie Webster, Cassini鈥檚 manager of spacecraft operations at NASA鈥檚 Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Typically, Cassini stores data from its instruments on a hard drive for at least a few hours before transmitting it back to Earth. But since the spacecraft will only survive a few minutes after it begins its final fiery plunge, it will stream the data from its last few hours in real time.

Mission improbable

There won鈥檛 be any more pictures, though, since they take up too much bandwidth and would take too long to send home. Instead, the live stream will consist of information about the makeup of the dust and gas in Saturn鈥檚 atmosphere, measurements of the planet鈥檚 magnetic field, and data in radio, infrared, and ultraviolet wavelengths.

鈥淎s we fly through the atmosphere, we are able to literally scoop up some molecules, and from those we can figure out the ground truth in Saturn鈥檚 atmosphere,鈥 says Scott Edgington, a Cassini project scientist. 鈥淛ust like almost everything else in this mission, I expect to be completely surprised.鈥

While many of Cassini鈥檚 most unexpected discoveries were related to Saturn鈥檚 moons, especially the water worlds Enceladus and Titan, it has also unveiled some mysteries on the ringed planet itself.

Saturn鈥檚 stormy nature

In 2007, images from Cassini revealed a colossal hexagonal feature at Saturn鈥檚 north pole which had only been partially glimpsed by the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft. They also showed hurricanes thousands of kilometres across at both poles, but it鈥檚 not yet clear what powers those huge storms.

The mission also found strangeness in Saturn鈥檚 magnetic and gravitational fields that nobody has yet been able to explain. 鈥淲e鈥檙e finding that Saturn is complicated on the inside, and to date the leading models have been shown to be wrong,鈥 says Edgington.

More recently, as the craft swooped between Saturn鈥檚 rings and the planet for the first time, it found a surprising lack of large ice particles in the gap. Some particles do fall from the rings into the atmosphere in a phenomenon called ring-rain, though, and researchers hope that Cassini may be able to learn more about the interactions between the rings and the planet during its final descent.

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