Asset Publisher

Titan Surface Landing

Titan Surface Landing

14 January 2005 represents a milestone in space exploration. At around 11:30 UTC the Huygens probe successfully landed on the surface of Titan - making it the first probe to land on an object in the outer Solar System.

Descent Preparation and Communication

The Huygens mission officially started at around 09:06 UTC when the Huygens probe reached the predetermined interface altitude of 1270 km above the surface of Titan. Prior to this mark two crucial events took place that marked a transition from the cruise phase to operations phase:

  • 04:44 UTC
    Mission Timer Unit (MTU) activated the Huygens probe.
  • 07:02 UTC
    Cassini turned to point the HGA at the landing site in order to communicate with the probe. Communications would last for a maximum of 4h 36 minutes after interface at which point Huygens would pass over the horizon relative to Cassini.

Trajectory of the Huygens Probe and the Cassini Orbiter from Entry - 7 hours until Entry + 4 hours, in the Titan reference frame.
(Image courtesy NASA)

Descent To Surface

The mission is thought to have followed the pre-mission schedule (listed in detail below) reasonably accurately. The only real variation is the surface descent phase took 2h27m50s as opposed to the pre-mission estimate of 2h21m.

It will be some time before scientists full assess the descent profile taken by Huygens - although there is lots of information to work with. Alongside the spacecraft instrument readings the descent of Huygens was tracked by radio telescopes around the world, which monitored the carrier signal sent by a transmitter activated when the first parachute deployed. The confirmation of the detection of this signal by the Green Bank 110m dish at around 10:30 UTC was the first indication that the mission had gone to plan.

From interface altitude at 1270 km the probe desecened through haze until an altitude of about 30 km above the surface. This was around half the altitude suggested by pre-mission estimates of between 70 to 50 km above the surface.

At an altitude of 700m above the surface the descent lamp was activated. The purpose of this lamp was to not to illuminate the landing site, the light levels on the surface of Titan are roughly 1000 times less than sunlight and 1000 times stronger than a full moon, but to provide a monochromatic light source and enable scientists to accurately determine the reflectivity of the surface.

Surface Phase

The surface phase of the mission lasted 1h 10 minutes - considerably longer than had been anticipated. There were three main reasons for this:

  • The initial mission scenario allowed Huygens and Cassini to communicate for around 2h15m, the revised scenario allowed for 4h36m
  • There was no failure on the batteries so all five could be used to power the probe. System redundancy meant Huygens only required four batteries to complete a nominal mission
  • The landing on the surface was soft meaning no damage was done to the probe.

Early indications are that the surface where Titan landed consists of a thin frozen crust that is around 10 cm thick with a less dense layer benath.

Timeline of Events

Ground UTC Time wrt Entry Event
6 January 2005
11:53 -07d 21h Spacecraft configured for probe relay. All instruments except MAG are turned off
7 January 2005
09:00 -07d 00h Probe relay critical sequence begins. 8 day quiet period of minimal spacecraft activity before relay begins; Orbiter on thruster control
14 January 2005
06:26 - 02h 40m Set Solid State Recorder pointers for probe recording
06:38 - 02h 28m Transition to thruster control for relay
06:48 - 02h 18m Perform final recorder configuration for relay
06:50 - 02h 16m Turn on probe receivers
07:02 - 02h 04m Turn Orbiter to point to Titan
07:14 - 01h 52m Turn to Titan complete
07:17 - 01h 49m Disable X band downlink
08:44 - 00h 22m Probe turns transmitters on; Low power mode
09:06 + 00h 00m Probe reaches interface altitude. Entry altitude = 1270 km
09:08 + 00h 02m Probe feels maximum deceleration
09:09 + 00h 03m Pilot chute deployed at 170-190 km altitude
Speed = Mach 1.5
Pilot chute is 2.6m in diameter
09:09 + 00h 03m Aft cover released, main parachute deployed
Altitude 160-180 km
Speed = Mach 1.5
2.5 seconds after pilot chute deployed
main chute is 8.3m in diameter
09:10 + 00h 04m Probe begins transmission to Orbiter
09:10 + 00h 04m Release front shield
Transmitters to high power
Istruments configured for descent
Measurements begin
152-175 km
Speed < Mach 0.6
09:25 + 00h 19m Main parachute separation
Deploy stabilizing drogue chute
110-140 km altitude
Drogue is 3m in diameter
09:42 + 00h 36m Surface proximity sensor activated at 60 km altitude
09:49 + 00h 43m Possible icing effects to Probe at 50 km altitude
11:12 + 02h 06m Titan-C orbiter closest approach.
Inbound 60 000 km flyby at 5.4 kms-1, 93 deg phase
11:23 + 02h 17m Descent imager lamp on
11:27 + 02h 21m Surface impact, end descent phase. May vary ± 15 min depending on descent time
13:37 + 04h 31m Orbiter stops collecting probe data.
Maximum of 4 hours and 36 minutes of data collection
13:39 + 04h 33m Write protect probe data partitions. Partitions A5 and B5 of Solid State Recorder are protected from further data writing.
13:47 + 04h 41m Turn Orbiter to point to Earth
13:50 + 04h 44m Turn to Earth complete
13:59 + 04h 53m Critical sequence ends; S07 background sequence B begins
14:00 + 04h 54m Post-Probe tracking begins. Canberra 70m station receiving; 10 minutes for DSN lockup allocated
14:07 + 05h 01m First telemetry data sent to Earth
14:10 + 05h 04m Playback of probe data begins at Canberra at 66,360 bps
16:50 + 07h 44m End playback of first partition First copy of probe data received at Earth
16:57 + 07h 51m Ascending ring-plane crossing
Distance = 18.4 Saturn radii
17:53 + 08h 47m Start tracking at Madrid 70m. Data rate upgraded to 142,200 bps
21:00 + 11h 54m End first full playback of all probe data. Complete set of all copies probe data received at Earth
15 January 2005
00:22 + 15h 16m First complete set of probe data reaches Huygens Operations Center. No later than time listed; likely up to ~3 hours earlier
02:28 + 17h 22m Start tracking at Goldstone 70m
11:00 + 01d 02h Power on of orbiter instruments, if Orbiter is healthy and playback proceeding per plan
12:23 + 01d 03h End nominal playback of Probe data

Pre-mission predicted times.

Last Update: 1 September 2019
2-Dec-2024 06:51 UT

ShortUrl Portlet

Shortcut URL

https://sci.esa.int/s/ABnZp2A

Images And Videos

Related Publications

Related Links

Documentation