Cassini spacecraft gets it's back up
14 Mar 2009
Early Thursday morning (US time) the Cassini spacecraft relayed information that it had successfully swapped to a backup set of propulsion thrusters late Wednesday.
The swap was performed because of degradation in the performance of the primary thrusters, which had been in use since Cassini's launch in 1997. This is only the second time in Cassini's 11 years of flight that the engineering teams have gone to a backup system.
< An artist's impression of the Cassini spacecraft at Saturn.
The thrusters are used for making small corrections to the spacecraft's course and for some pointing control functions.. The redundant set is an identical set of eight thrusters. Almost all Cassini engineering subsystems have redundant backup capability.
Cassini has successfully completed its original four-year planned tour of Saturn and is now in extended mission operations around the ringed planet.
Adapted from information issued by JPL.
LATEST HEADLINES & TOP STORIES:
> Stars are the leading lights in a new galaxy image
> Aussie scientists study stars with NASA
> Hubble: new evidence for dark matter
> Cassini spacecraft gets it's back up
> Watch the space station on webcam!
> Texas telescope to help spot Earth-like planets
> Tantalising signs of water activity on Mars
> Mars probe's computer rebooted
> Shuttle mission delayed by fuel leak
> A close-up look at Mars' moon Deimos
> Telescopes team up for 3D view of galaxies
> Teaming up to find new Earths
> Satellite spots the start of a cosmic explosion
> Build your own space station!
> DOWN TO EARTH: Ice in the Sea of Okhotsk
> Mars rover has to take the long way 'round
> Study hints at water—and life—under a martian volcano
> DOWN TO EARTH: "Cloud streets" near Greenland
> Kepler rockets into space to find other Earths
> All systems go for shuttle launch this week
> The ups and downs of a Mars rover
> DOWN TO EARTH: Snowbound US east coast
> Astronomers hope to find lots of planets
> MAIN NEWS PAGE…
Search SpaceInfo…

