The Cassini team says goodbye NASA/Joel Kowsky
The Cassini spacecraft鈥檚 mission ended in seconds when its signal was lost after entering Saturn鈥檚 atmosphere in the early hours of 15 September. But saying goodbye has been a week-long process at Mission Control in Jet Propulsion Laboratories in Pasadena, California.
The beginning of the end started on 12 September with Titan鈥檚 鈥渒iss goodbye.鈥 Cassini made its last flyby of Saturn鈥檚 largest moon, using Titan’s gravity to steepen the spacecraft鈥檚 trajectory directly into Saturn鈥檚 maw.
Hours later, Cassini reached apoapse, the furthest point in its orbit before starting the 1.3 million-kilometer-long plunge into the gas giant. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a roller coaster a million miles high. [Cassini]鈥檚 just falling, falling, falling with nothing in the way,鈥 , Cassini real time operations聽engineer, explained to me when I arrived at JPL early the next morning.
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The sunny campus was bustling with visitors and media. Cassini team members gathered from all aspects of the mission, stopping to chat when they caught sight of a colleague. I sat with , the orbit determination lead on the Cassini mission, at a picnic table overlooking the busy courtyard. 鈥淚t鈥檚 sad, but at the same time I鈥檒l be able to breathe again when this is done,鈥 she said.
But under the somber mood lay a twist of humour. When I stopped by Mission Control, I found a mockup of 鈥淔lying the Cassini Spacecraft for Dummies鈥 on the desk of Cassini鈥檚 Mission Ace, the engineer who monitors the spacecraft in real time. When I visited again on Thursday, the room was fully-staffed with Cassini鈥檚 final team and the crew responded to our photos of them in their fishbowl by standing in unison to photograph us in return.
I found Bellerose on Cassini鈥檚 second-to-last shift, monitoring telemetry to ensure the spacecraft was still functioning perfectly. She waved at me through the glass, her earlier claims of needing a nap undercut by her cheerful enthusiasm. She was excited to actually see the thrusters fire in Saturn鈥檚 atmosphere, and to witness the force she鈥檇 used to guide Cassini through Saturn鈥檚 moons at work in the mission鈥檚 final minute.
I joined others to stand vigil for Cassini in the darkness of Friday morning at JPL while hundreds more of Cassini鈥檚 extended family gathered across town at Caltech. During NASA TV鈥檚 countdown to Saturn entry, scientists and engineers broke into cheers and applause each time one of their team appeared on the enormous screen dominating the auditorium.
Finally, it was time: Cassini鈥檚 radio heartbeat, its real-time scientific data streaming directly to the enormous Deep Space Network antenna in Canberra, Australia, jittered across the screen. The seconds ticked down to expected mission end, leaving a pregnant silence.
Then disbelieving, gasping whispers as the signal continued. A break, the signal was reacquired — was that Cassini鈥檚 thrusters fighting Saturn鈥檚 storms? — a break again, then it was lost forever.
Applause broke the silence, and quickly grew into a standing ovation in tribute to both the robot and human team that made it possible. So many who were so uncertain how they were going to feel found themselves overwhelmed with emotion. Proud, yet lost and saddened by the dissolution of not just the spacecraft, but their extended Cassini family.
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