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This video of Jupiter's surface spans 24 rotations between October 31 and November 9 (refresh browser to replay animation)
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Revived Cassini preps for Jupiter flyby, shoots color movie
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Computer-generated illustration of the Cassini spacecraft
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By Richard Stenger CNN.com Writer
(CNN) -- The troubled Cassini probe will resume making scientific
observations of Jupiter before flying by the giant planet to conduct
joint studies with another spacecraft, NASA said Thursday.
Mission engineers shut down instruments on Cassini after its
maneuvering system malfunctioned eleven days ago. After more than a
week of tests, they determined that the craft could move around without
any problems.
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"Everything has been working smoothly, so we're planning to send up
commands today to resume all scientific observations," said NASA
scientist Bob Mitchell in a statement.
Before its instruments were turned off, Cassini had been sending back
thousands of images of Jupiter. The probe is flying by the planet as it
travels on a $3.5 billion journey to Saturn and its moon Titan.
NASA released Cassini's first color movie of Jupiter this week. The
short clip presents the entire circumference of the planet, flattened into the form of a rectangle.
Like a similar map of the Earth, the most extreme northern and southern
latitudes are stretched out considerably. The smallest discernable
details at the equator are about 600 kilometers (about 370 miles)
across.
Video captures Red Spot, possible thunderstorms
The Great Red Spot swirls, orange and white storm bands slide against
each other and momentary black dots reveal the shadow of passing moons
in the video, which spans 24 Jupiter rotations between October 31 and
November 9.
To the east (right) of the Red Spot, oval storms roll over each other
like ball bearings. Small, bright features appear quickly and randomly
in turbulent regions, possible signs of lightning storms.
The smallest visible features at the equator are about 600 kilometers
(about 370 miles) across. In a map of this nature, the most
extreme northern and southern latitudes are unnaturally stretched out.
Observations were halted December 17 after one of the spacecraft's four
"reaction wheels" experienced problems, causing Cassini to switch to a different maneuvering system.
The reaction wheels serve to point the spacecraft in any desired direction. When an electric motor spins one of Cassini's wheels, the spacecraft rotates in the opposite direction.
The problem surfaced when one of the reaction wheels began to need
extra force to turn, and the spacecraft reacted by automatically
switching from electricity to a hydrazine thrusting system to maneuver.
The hydrazine must be conserved for the primary mission at Saturn,
according to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California,
which manages the mission for NASA and the European and Italian space
agencies.
Probes to conduct joint Jupiter study
JPL engineers speculate that excessive friction caused by prolonged
operation at low speeds caused one reaction wheel to malfunction.
Testing the wheel at higher speeds may have restored a necessary
lubricant.
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"That's our leading theory, but we may never know for sure," Mitchell
said.
Cassini will pass Jupiter at a distance of 10 million km (6 million
miles) on December 30, gaining a slingshot-like boost from the planet's gravity that will help
the spacecraft reach Saturn in July 2004.
The probe will conduct the first joint investigation of Jupiter with
another spacecraft, Galileo, which has orbited the planet system for
five years.
The robotic duo will make observations of the Jupiter system and its
magnetic fields from different locations. One will be inside and the
other outside the magnetic envelope. NASA scientists hope to study the
effects of the solar wind on the magnetic field around Jupiter.
Other synchronized studies of the largest planet in the solar system
are in the works. Before Cassini leaves the Jupiter system, it will
take pictures of the planet's night-side aurora in January.
At the same time, back in Earth orbit, the Hubble telescope will train
its powerful lens on Jupiter's day-side aurora.
RELATED STORIES:
Spacecraft tunes in to the music of Jupiter
December 19, 2000
Jupiter turns blue before in-depth exam
December 15, 2000
Jupiter's Red Spot stares down Io in new flyby pics
December 12, 2000
Space probe films cloud dance on Jupiter
November 21, 2000
RELATED SITES:
Cassini-Huygens Mission to Saturn and Titan
Jupiter Millennium Flyby
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
NASA
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