In the most ambitious and expensive interplanetary space mission of
all time, the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft made a seven-year trek across
the Solar System to attempt first contact with the Earth-like moon of
Titan by landing a probe on its unseen surface.
The first close up images of Saturn and its many moons were taken in
the early 1980s by the Voyager One Deep Space Probe. One moon stood out
from all the rest, the mysterious moon of Titan. Unlike any moon that
had ever been seen, it had a thick almost Earth-like atmosphere. It was
also shrouded in a thick orange haze which prevented Voyager from
seeing down to the moon's surface. Scientists knew they had to go back.
Launched in 1997, the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft was the result of a
unique transatlantic $3.2 billion collaboration between NASA and the
European space agencies. Steered from NASA's JPL mission control in
Pasadena California, the craft took seven years to reach Saturn. It
took a long slingshot route via Venus twice, the Earth and Jupiter to
pick up enough speed to reach its final destination.
When it finally arrived in July 2004, the spacecraft had to carry
out a very dangerous manoeuvre and pass between Saturn's rings in order
to get into orbit around the giant planet. Even the tiniest grain of
dust could have ripped through the spacecraft and destroyed the
mission.
On Christmas Day 2004, the European-built Huygens probe was finally
released from the Cassini mothership, ready to descend to Titan. The
probe's trajectory had to be absolutely spot on, as without any engines
even a slight misjudgement could not be corrected later and would mean
Huygens missing its target altogether.
January 14 2005. The Huygens probe finally reached Titan's upper
atmosphere. Mission control had now transferred to ESA in Darmstardt,
Germany, but all the scientists could do was sit and wait, as the probe
was running on automatic. For any chance of success, the probe's heat
shield had to protect the craft from the fierce temperatures of
re-entry, and its three parachutes had to deploy correctly in sequence
to slow its descent.
Amazingly, long before they expected to hear from Huygens, the
probe's faint carrier signal was picked up on Earth by the massive
Robert C Byrd radio telescope at Greenbank in West Virginia. Not much
stronger than a mobile phone, and travelling over a billion kilometres
through space, the signal was too weak to carry any real data, but at
least they knew the probe had survived entry and was now under
parachute.
Some hours later, the scientific data finally started coming
through, relayed via the orbiting Cassini. To their horror, one of the
vital data-streams had not been switched on. Fortunately most of the
data was coming through on the single channel, but crucially half the
images were lost.
After years of waiting, Titan was finally revealed. With Huygens
built to sniff and taste the atmosphere on its way down, it discovered
it was similar in many ways to that of the Earth in its infancy, four
billion years ago. Titan's chemistry is still a long way from what we
see as 'living', yet it was found to contain a rich cocktail of organic
carbon-based chemicals, thought to be important as the precursors to
life.
Now visible beneath the impenetrable orange haze, Titan appears to
look a lot like Earth. The images beamed back from over a billion
kilometres away show lake beds, river channels, gulleys and canyons.
But these river channels are gouged not by water, but by a rain of
liquid methane. The surface itself is not made of rock, but of solid
ice, and Huygens' landing site was strewn with small round ice pebbles,
lying in a bed of icy sand grains. Although home to a somewhat cold
alien chemistry, in many respects Titan is driven by exactly the same
geological and meteorological processes that shape and contour our own
planet. Titan is certainly a place like home.