Cassini Skims Titan Atmosphere

in
Department: 
Saturn
Teaser: 

"Cassini makes its closest-ever approach to Titan Sunday, dipping within 547 miles of Saturn's most Earthlike moon to get a taste of its magnetic fields."

Source: 

Wired Top Stories Download time: Jun 22 2010 8:54 AM ET

The Cassini spacecraft made its deepest dip ever into the atmosphere of Titan, Saturn's largest moon, at 8:28 p.m. Eastern time on June 20. The data it collected will help determine whether the moon has its own magnetic field.

"For Titan scientists, this is one of the most anticipated flybys of the whole mission," wrote space physicist Cesar Bertucci of the Institute of Astronomy and Space Physics in Buenos Aires, Argentina in a blog post. That's saying something, as Cassini has already orbited Saturn for six years and may last seven more.

The flyby took Cassini within 547 miles of Titan's surface, about two and a half times the altitude of the International Space Station. Although this distance shaved only 43 miles off the next nearest approach, the flyby was the first to take the spacecraft below Titan's ionosphere, a layer of charged particles in the upper atmosphere. The ionosphere shielded the spacecraft from Saturn's much larger magnetic field, allowing scientists the first hints of whether Titan has a magnetic field of its own.…

See Wired Top Stories for links to further info.