Cassini Spacecraft to Monitor North Pole on Titan
Though there are no plans to examine whether Saturn's moon Titan has a Santa Claus, NASA's Cassini will zoom close to Titan's north pole this weekend.
The flyby, which brings Cassini to within about 960 kilometers (600 miles) of the Titan surface at 82 degrees north latitude, will occur the evening of Dec. 27 Pacific time, or soon after midnight Universal Time on Dec. 28.
The encounter will facilitate scientists to gather more detail on how the lake-dotted north polar region of Titan changes with the seasons. Scientists will be using high-resolution radar to scan the large and several lakes in the north polar region for shape-shifting in size and depth. The ion and neutral mass spectrometer team will take baseline measurements of the atmosphere to compare with the moon's south polar region when Cassini flies by that area on Jan. 12. Cassini will also be collecting pictures for a mosaic of a bright region called Adiri, where the Huygens probe landed nearly five years ago.
Cassini will have released the Huygens probe exactly five years and three days before this latest flyby. Huygens began its expedition down to Titan on the evening of Dec. 24, 2004 California time, or early Dec. 25 Universal Time, and reached the surface Jan. 14, 2005.
Cassini last flew by Titan on Dec. 11, 2009 California time, or Dec. 12 Universal Time. Although this latest flyby is dubbed "T64," scheduling changes early in the orbital tour have made this the 65th targeted flyby of Titan.
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