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Enceladus Fly-by - 31 October 2008

Enceladus Fly-by - 31 October 2008

29 October 2008

Just over three weeks after the previous fly-by of Enceladus, Cassini will again fly by this Saturnian moon, passing at an altitude of 197 kilometres. Cassini will approach Enceladus on a fast, inclined trajectory over the northern hemisphere and will depart over the southern hemisphere. The closest approach occurs on 31 October at 17:14:51 UT over latitude 28° S and longitude 97° W.

The Optical Remote Sensing (ORS) instruments are at the focus of the science operations during this fly-by. The Imaging Science Subsystem camera will execute a sophisticated series of images starting just 2 minutes after closest-approach, obtaining images of the south polar "tiger stripes" at resolutions as high as 8.4 m/pixel. Enceladus will be in eclipse (in Saturn's shadow) for about 2.5 hours starting about 50 minutes after closest-approach.

This encounter will occur 3 days prior to the T46 Titan fly-by (of 3 November), on the inbound leg of Cassini's orbit number 91.

Science Activities

  • Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS)
    ISS will image the south polar terrain at up to 8.4 meter-scale resolution. ISS will execute a "skeet shoot" series of images to carefully balance light and smear during the closest approach of this fast fly-by. Results will be compared with complementary coverage from the 080EN fly-by to study both active and inactive regions.
  • Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS)
    CIRS will make observations of the south polar temperatures during solar eclipse to determine the heat capacity and textural properties of the regolith. These maps will complement data obtained in previous fly-bys. During this fly-by, while in sunlight, CIRS will focus on the Damascus and Cairo sulci.
  • Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS)
    VIMS will perform compositional mapping and will look for confirmation of weak spectral features such as those due to organics, CO2, ammonia, and other compounds. VIMS will search for hotspots with temperatures >140K.
  • Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph (UVIS)
    UVIS will obtain spectral images of Enceladus in the EUV (500-1100 Å) and FUV (1100-1900 Å) to map the surface composition, including water ice abundances and grain sizes, and will search for volatiles in the vicinity of Enceladus.

Table of events

18 October 2008

Time UTC Time wrt
EN-91
Activity
20:21:00 -12d21h Start of sequence S45 which contains Enceladus-91

30 October 2008

Time UTC Time wrt
EN-91
Activity
19:37:00 -21h37m Start of the SOST segment which contains 091EN.
20:22:00 -20h52m pre-Enceladus science, observations of Saturn aurorae

31 October 2008

Time UTC Time wrt
EN-91
Activity
00:40:00 -16h34m Inbound Enceladus plume observations (distant). 3.6 hour medium-phase angle observation of Enceladus (inbound over northern hemisphere). ISS prime
05:05:00 -12h09m Downlink of radio science gravity measurements (Madrid 70m)
08:20:00 -08h54m Deadtime, 15 minutes long. Used to accommodate changes in flyby time
08:35:51 -08h39m Inbound ORS observations. UVIS prime - distant neutral gas distribution measurements
12:14:51 -05h00m Inbound ORS observations. VIMS prime - northern hemisphere compositional measurements
13:14:51 -04h00m Inbound ORS observations. CIRS prime - series of stares, scans of northern hemisphere
16:04:51 -01h10m Inbound ORS observations. VIMS prime - northern hemisphere compositional measurements
16:34:51 -00h40m Inbound ORS observations. ISS prime -
turn spacecraft to capture south pole and execute "skeet shoot" and mosaic
17:14:51 +00h00m Enceladus-91 Flyby Closest Approach Time. Altitude =196.9 km, speed = 17.7 kms-1, mid phase inbound, 113.3° phase at closest approach, mid phase outbound
17:44:51 +00h30m Outbound ORS observations. Outbound UVIS south pole scan
18:04:51 +00h50m Outbound ORS observations. CIRS eclipse measurements of south pole
21:14:51 +04h00m Outbound ORS observations. VIMS prime - compositional mapping of southern hemisphere
22:14:51 +05h00m Outbound ORS observations. UVIS prime - distant neutral gas distribution measurements

1 November 2008

Time UTC Time wrt
EN-91
Activity
00:14:51 +07h00m Deadtime, 15 minutes long. Used to accommodate changes in flyby time
03:20:00 +10h06m Downlink of radio science gravity measurements (Madrid 70m)
06:15:00 +13h01m Outbound ORS observations. UVIS prime - distant neutral gas distribution measurements
10:22:00 +17h08m Downlink, 9 hr (Goldstone 70m)

Observation Results

Cassini Instrument: Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS) 

Date: 1 November 2008

Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Image Notes: 9th of 10 skeet shoot* images of the south polar surface fractures (tiger stripes) taken by the narrow-angle camera. Image scale ~35 m per pixel.

Date: 1 November 2008

Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Image Notes: 8th of 10 skeet shoot* images of the tiger stripes in the south polar region taken by the narrow-angle camera. Image scale ~33 m per pixel.

Date: 1 November 2008

Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Image Notes: Mosaic of the first 4 skeet shoot* images taken by the narrow angle camera, scaled at 12.3 m/pixel, with one of the jet sources in the upper right.

Date: 1 November 2008

Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Image Notes: 4th of 10 skeet shoot* images of the tiger stripes in the south polar region taken by the narrow-angle camera. Image scale ~38 m per pixel.

Date: 1 November 2008

Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Image Notes: 1st of 10 skeet shoot* images of the tiger stripes in the south polar region taken by the narrow-angle camera. Image scale ~9 m per pixel.

* See the related links for more details on the skeet shoot sequence.

Last Update: 1 September 2019
29-Mar-2024 09:06 UT

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