Planetary News: Cassini-Huygens (2005)
New Mosaics of Huygens' Titan Images
By Emily Lakdawalla
May 5, 2005
Although the two spacecraft traveled a billion kilometers together to study
Titan, Cassini and Huygens are two very different types of missions. Cassini's
data will be built up very slowly over the course of a four-year mission,
and scientists frequently share provisional data products with the world,
knowing that they will be supplanted with better or more complete data sets
in the future. Such provisional results are very important for Cassini because
the spacecraft's orbit can be tweaked on the basis of early results to make
the most of the mission, the same way that the Mars Exploration Rover scientists
guide the rovers to the best targets on Mars based on each day's new data.
By contrast, Huygens captured all of its data in three exciting hours; scientists
have everything that they will ever get from the spacecraft. They are proceeding
methodically in their preparation of that data, much like a paleontologist
prepares a fossil specimen carefully, piecing the skeleton together before
sharing the find with the world. We have seen all of Huygens' raw images,
but few processed image products have been shared, until now. This week, the
Huygens Descent Imager Spectral Radiometer Team released several new mosaics.
The first view shows the panorama visible to Huygens from an altitude of
about 35 kilometers (22 miles), just below the cloud deck.
Huygens mosaic: 35 kilometers altitude
Credit: ESA / NASA / JPL / University of Arizona
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There was still a lot of haze at this altitude, and the view near the horizon
is very fuzzy. But directly below the probe -- the area marked by the faint
gray circle -- you can already see the sharp boundary between bright highland
to the north and west and dark lowland to the south and east. The white dots
on the image are Huygens' ground track, and the numbers Huygens' altitude
in kilometers as it flew over each point on the ground. The next image zooms
in on the area bounded by the gray circle.
Huygens mosaic: 8 kilometers altitude
Credit: ESA / NASA / JPL / University of Arizona
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Now we are lower, at an altitude of 8 kilometers (5 miles), and Huygens'
view is much clearer. Huygens' ground track marches inexorably to the east,
though the descent is now getting much steeper. To the left (east) we can
see the "alien landing strip," the straight, broad channel with
stubby tributaries. To the north we can see the drainage channels that so
shocked the scientists when they were first spotted in Huygens' images on
January 15. To the Pasadena, California-based management team of Cassini-Huygens,
this set of channels debouching into the ocean-like dark lowlands were reminiscent
of the Los Angeles River's terminus at Long Beach, California. Again, the
gray circle at the center of this image marks the boundary of the next mosaic.
Huygens mosaic: 1.2 kilometers altitude
Credit: ESA / NASA / JPL / University of Arizona
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This one represents the view from 1.2 kilometers (4000 feet). Now the images
become fuzzy because the landscape is very dark, lacking contrast, and the
available light quite dim. Still, Huygens made out what looks like a ridge
dissected by channels. Probably the oddest thing in this image is the ground
track. It continues from west to east, but suddenly, below an elevation of
9.3 kilometers (5.8 miles), Huygens' eastward motion stalled. The probe descended,
took a hairpin turn, and traveled back in the direction that it had come from!
Huygens mosaic: 800 meters altitude
Credit: ESA / NASA / JPL / University of Arizona
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Finally, the image above shows the highest-resolution available images of
the landing site. During the final part of the descent, Huygens stopped capturing
images, and never got a high-resolution image of the point at which it touched
down. That point is marked with the white cross at the center of this mosaic.
These mosaics are just the beginning of the new results that Huygens scientists
will be sharing with the world in the coming weeks and months. The first scientific
articles about the mission to Titan are now in the pipeline, undergoing peer
review, on their way to publication. Stay tuned to planetary.org for much
more from ESA's Titan probe!
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