Planetary News: Cassini-Huygens (2005)
Radio Astronomers Rescue Science Results
for Huygens' Doppler Wind Experiment
By Emily Lakdawalla
February 9, 2005
Earth's radio astronomers have saved the day for one of the Huygens instrument
teams. Today, the Doppler Wind Experiment (DWE) team announced their first
science results, despite losing nearly all of their expected data. "We
were not able to receive our Doppler Wind data on the channel from Huygens that
we wanted," says Doppler Wind Experiment Principal Investigator Mike
Bird, "but we were able to receive that radio signal at many stations
on Earth, and we now have a profile of the winds on Titan."
The Doppler Wind Experiment has confirmed that Titan is a "super-rotator," meaning
that its atmosphere rotates from west to east faster than the planet does.
Bird explained that this is the expected situation on slowly rotating planets
having atmospheres. Another such planet, Venus, is also a super-rotator, and
evidence from ground-based and Cassini observations of the motion of Titan's
clouds had already indicated that Titan was a super-rotator. In fact, throughout
the zonal wind profile "the winds are basically what we expected," Bird
says. "Particularly in the latter 60 kilometers (37 miles) of the descent,
the winds are a little bit boring because they're just almost exactly what
we expected."
The Doppler Wind Experiment has confirmed that Titan is a "super-rotator," meaning
that its atmosphere rotates from west to east faster than the planet does.
Bird explained that this is the expected situation on slowly rotating planets
having atmospheres. Another such planet, Venus, is also a super-rotator, and
evidence from ground-based and Cassini observations of the motion of Titan's
clouds had already indicated that Titan was a super-rotator. In fact, throughout
the zonal wind profile "the winds are basically what we expected," Bird
says. "Particularly in the latter 60 kilometers (37 miles) of the descent,
the winds are a little bit boring because they're just almost exactly what
we expected."
But, Bird added, "There are some surprises in this profile. No one was
really expecting anything other than a fairly simple linear increase [of wind
speed] with altitude up to the point we started the mission. I'm glad we didn't
measure just that, because you always like to have a little fun with these
measurements, and I think we have enough to work with here, something for
the theoreticians to think about."
What the Doppler Wind Experiment team found was that above an altitude of
60 kilometers (37 miles), Huygens' ride through the atmosphere was a lot bumpier
than theoreticians had predicted, a fact that had already been observed in
data from the other instrument teams. "The atmosphere of Titan was a
bit unkind to Huygens because it was really quite turbulent," Huygens
Project Scientist Jean-Pierre Lebreton says. "We could clearly see in
the engineering data that there was a lot of swinging under the main parachute
and a lot of turbulent motion of the probe, especially in the lower stratosphere.
It suddenly became quieter when we went through the tropopause."
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Diagram of Titan's Atmosphere
Like the Earth's atmosphere, Titan's atmosphere can be separated into the troposphere, stratosphere, and upper atmosphere. The troposphere is the densest part of the atmosphere, where the temperature is the warmest near the ground, and decreases as you go to higher altitudes. In the thinner stratosphere, however, temperature increases with altitude. The boundary between the two regions is called the tropopause.
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The tropopause is the boundary between Titan's troposphere and stratosphere.
At that altitude, the Doppler Wind Experiment team observed large variations
in their measurements, indicating a region of "very severe fluctuations
in the wind velocity," according to Bird. Such rough winds are not present
at the tropopause in Earth's atmosphere, so its origin is a puzzle to the
science team.
The unexpectedly rough ride has caused serious difficulties for the other
science teams, particularly for Huygens' cameras, the Descent Imager / Spectral
Radiometer. The cameras depended upon a Sun sensor to determine which direction
the spinning probe was facing when it took pictures. But "the probe was
tipping so violently that the Sun would go out of the field of view," says
camera co-investigator Lyn Doose.
The Descent Imager / Spectral Radiometer had three cameras, one pointed to
the side, one at a roughly 45-degree angle downward, and one straight down.
At one point in the descent, Doose reports, the camera pointing downward at
a 45-degree angle actually had the Sun in its field of view! "The Sun
was at 50 degrees elevation, so [Huygens] was turned 90 degrees, I think.
It was unexpected. We were given specifications that said there may be a gust
that would tip you more than 10 degrees a few times during the mission, but
typically you should expect to be hanging vertically by 10 degrees or less.
Nobody could have predicted this."
DWE Lost and Regained
That the Doppler Wind Experiment team can report results today is more amazing
than the results themselves, because they come despite the devastating loss
of most of their data. To understand what happened, we must take a look at
how the Doppler Wind Experiment was designed.
The goal of the Doppler Wind experiment was to track the horizontal motion
of the Huygens probe as it descended through the atmosphere. It worked
by observing the Doppler shift of the carrier signal transmitted from Huygens
to Cassini. As Huygens traveled away from Cassini, the Doppler effect caused
the frequency of her carrier signal to decrease, or "shift." As
Huygens' motion carried the probe lower in Titan's atmosphere, winds of
greater or lesser intensity caused the Doppler shift of Huygens' signal to
increase and decrease. The Doppler shift of Huygens' signal over the course
of the mission therefore provide a direct measurement of the velocity of the
Huygens probe along the line of sight from the probe to the orbiter.
If there were no winds on Titan, Huygens would have descended straight down
onto Titan under its parachutes. The velocity of the probe as measured by
the orbiter under this circumstance can be modeled quite accurately. By examining
how the measured velocity of the probe at different altitudes (measurements
of the probe's altitude being provided by other instruments), the science
team could determine how the actual winds on Titan made Huygens' descent diverge
from the vertical.
In order to measure minute shifts in the frequency of Huygens' carrier signal,
the Doppler Wind Experiment team needed to be assured that the signal from
Huygens was extremely stable, never varying from its nominal 2040 Megahertz.
Radio transmitters and receivers employ a device called an "oscillator" to
generate and observe the carrier frequency. For the purposes of the Doppler
Wind Experiment, the usual quartz oscillators would not be stable enough,
especially under the extreme conditions of Huygens' deceleration in the first
part of its descent. So the team designed and built Ultrastable Oscillators
that contained a rubidium oscillator, the first time such oscillators were
included on a deep space mission.
Both Huygens and Cassini were fitted with Ultrastable Oscillators provided
by the Doppler Wind Experiment team in order to generate and receive Huygens'
carrier signal. Huygens and Cassini had two redundant radio systems, one of
which, "Channel A," had a signal provided by the Ultrastable Oscillators,
and the other, "Channel B," had a signal provided by the standard
quartz oscillators. Most of Huygens' instruments used both channels to transmit
data to Cassini, but the Doppler Wind experiment depended entirely upon Channel
A.
There was some redundancy in the Doppler Wind Experiment, however. Huygens
broadcast signals for the experiment only on Channel A, but those signals
could be detected in two places. Cassini was the primary detector. The team
also hoped that the weak signal from Huygens could be detected on Earth using
some of the Earth's largest radio telescopes. Many team members were not confident
that this detection would be possible. In fact, Bird says he had placed a
10-Euro bet with a colleague that it would not work (presumably figuring that
either way, he would be a winner). If the direct-to-Earth measurement worked,
it would allow the science team to determine not only the east-west component
of Titan's wind speeds, but also the north-south component. This direct-to-Earth
measurement was considered a bonus, not required for the success of the experiment,
but having great potential value to add if it worked.
When Cassini transmitted the data from Huygens to Earth on the evening of
January 14, no data came through on Channel A. Overnight, it became clear
to the horrified mission operators that Cassini had never been instructed
to turn on the Receiver Ultrastable Oscillator on Channel A. The entire Channel
A data stream was lost, and with it the data for the Doppler Wind Experiment
(as well as half of the images from the Descent Imager).
But the Earth's radio astronomers saved the day. Huygens' signal was detected
loud and clear by at least 17 radio telescopes, Bird lost his 10-Euro bet,
and he gained a priceless data set. Still, the Doppler tracking that was performed
by the Earth-based telescopes only gives information about the east-west wind
speeds. The second horizontal component of the wind speeds would have been
impossible to determine with just the Doppler data. But recent improvements
in Very Long Baseline Interferometry will eventually permit radio scientists
to produce a three-dimensional record of motion for Huygens during its entire
descent. For a blow-by-blow account of the loss, and recovery, of the Doppler
Wind Experiment by the Earth's radio scientists, read the related story: "They
Were the First, and the Last, to Hear from Huygens."
What's So Important About the Wind Profile, Anyway?
Craterless, channelized plains like these seen by Huygens' Descent Imager
/ Spectral Radiometer suggest that weather is one of the dominant forces shaping
Titan's landscape.
Image: NASA/ESA/University of Arizona
First of all, knowledge of the wind speeds on Titan at all altitudes is a
critically important ingredient in understanding the structure and dynamics
of Titan's atmosphere, and therefore its weather and climate. "The theoreticians
were very anxious to get this example of Titan, which is an intermediate case
between Venus and Earth, and of course they have a lot of pet theories that
they want to test," says Bird. Based on the images returned from the
Descent Imager, surface processes near the Huygens landing site are dominated
-- as they are on Earth -- by weather from the atmosphere, not by cratering
or volcanism. So understanding Titan's atmosphere is key to understanding
its surface and recent geological history.
Another useful application of the Doppler Wind Experiment data is to figure
out exactly where Huygens landed. Although maps showing a location for Huygens'
landing site have been published, Cassini-Huygens scientists privately express
doubt that the dot marks the right spot. The three-dimensional profile of
Huygens' motion that will eventually be produced from the Very Long Baseline
Interferometry observations should allow scientists to pinpoint exactly where
Huygens landed by tracing its path from its entry point to the surface. Preliminary
calculations from the zonal wind profile released today suggest that the landing
site "is going to be a good 100 or 150 kilometers [60 to 90 miles] from
where we went in," Bird says. "We dropped 150 kilometers, and I
have a feeling that we drifted about that same amount in the easterly direction."
For Bird, though, the real result from the Doppler Wind Experiment was "just
to see if we could do it! And we did. It's kind of remarkable that we can
use this technique to determine the velocities of circulation and atmospheres
as far away as Titan. And now we're doing it with less data than we had originally
planned to have, and it is really a remarkable feat to be able to get all
of this with just the data that we have from the radio telescopes on the ground."
Bird is philosophical about the loss of the Channel A data. "I've never
felt such exhilarating highs and dispiriting lows than those experienced when
we first detected the signal from the Green Bank Telescope, indicating 'all's
well,' and then discovering that we had no signal at the operations center,
indicating 'all's lost.' I have to say that I feel better now than I did just
after the mission. It's behind us, and I've pretty much decided that I'm just
going to let it ride, because there is nothing I can do about it now."
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