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Huygens landing spin mystery solved
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Jan 17, 2020

This image shows a replica of ESA's Huygens probe, as used in recent wind tunnel testing to characterise how the spacecraft spun as it descended to the surface of Titan - an event that made history on 14 January 2005. This mock-up is at a scale of 1/3 - the real Huygens probe, and appendages, was 3 times bigger. Various booms and appendages can be seen around the probe, including four flat Radar Altimeter antennas, two deployable booms for the Huygens Atmospheric Structure Instrument (HASI), different telemetry and sensor heads, pressure and temperature sensors, and the mechanism by which the heat shield and coverings would detach after atmospheric entry. This side of the spacecraft would be the side to touch down on the surface of Titan; the probe's descent parachute is stored on the side not in view.

Fifteen years ago today, ESA's Huygens probe made history when it descended to the surface of Saturn's moon Titan and became the first probe to successfully land on another world in the outer Solar System. However, during its descent, the probe began spinning the wrong way - and recent tests now reveal why.

Launched in 1997, the NASA/ESA/ASI Cassini-Huygens mission remains iconic and has contributed an enormous amount to our understanding of Saturn and its moon Titan since its arrival at the ringed planet in late 2004.

The mission comprised an orbiter, Cassini, which went on to orbit Saturn for over 13 years after becoming the first spacecraft to do so, and a small atmospheric probe, ESA's Huygens lander, which headed down to explore the physical properties and atmosphere of Titan on 14 January 2005.

Huygens' risky descent lasted for 2 hours and 27 minutes, and the data the small probe gathered went on to facilitate a wealth of discoveries about this fascinating moon.

The lander returned the first in situ measurements of Titan's atmosphere, determining its pressure, density and temperature from an altitude of 1400km down to the surface. The probe's Doppler Wind Experiment (DWE) spotted strong east-west winds in the moon's atmosphere, some of which rotated faster than the moon itself. It shed light on why Titan's atmosphere contains methane, nitrogen, and tiny aerosols, and in what quantities, and detected signs of geological processes and features in the moon's interior such as cryovolcanism and, potentially, a large subsurface ocean.

By cutting through and exploring the thick haze that enshrouds the moon, the probe also helped scientists to visualise the surface of Titan, returning evidence of past watery activity, such as dried up riverbeds and drainage networks and long-empty lake basins, and observations of the vast dunes of sand and ice.

However, one thing remained a mystery: why Huygens spun in the 'wrong' direction during its descent. The probe was released from Cassini spinning anti-clockwise at a rate of 7.5 rotations per minute. Due to the design of the probe, its spin rate helped to keep Huygens stable firstly as it spent three weeks coasting down to Titan, and then as it eventually entered the moon's atmosphere.

Although Huygens initially behaved as anticipated, during descent the probe's spin rate decreased far more rapidly than expected, before reversing after approximately 10 minutes to adopt a clockwise direction.

It kept spinning this way for the remaining 2 hours and 15 hours of descent; luckily, the magnitude of this reversed spin was similar to that expected by the researchers, meaning that the unexpected flip affected the timing of the planned observations, but did not dramatically affect their quality.

Previous studies have investigated this behaviour (for example a study conducted by Vorticity in 2014-2015) and recent subsonic wind tunnel testing at the PRISME Laboratory at the University of Orleans, France, now confirms the main cause. The study was carried out from 2017 to 2019 under an ESA contract with LPC2E/CNRS-University of Orleans.

Huygens was equipped with 36 angled vanes that were used to control the spin of the descent module. However, two of the probe's main appendages, the Separation Subsystem (SEPS) and the Radar Altimeter (RA) antennae, actually produced an unexpected torque opposite to that produced by the vanes. This effect was amplified as the vanes altered the gas flow around the descent module in a way that enhanced the amplitude of the 'negative torque' - the effect that made Huygens flip its direction of spin - until it exceeded the influence of the vanes.

The resolution of this engineering mystery will help inform the design of entry probes in the future, furthering our exploration of the Solar System.

There were also indications that the Huygens Atmospheric Structure Instrument (HASI) booms might have not been fully deployed during the descent, so specific tests were performed in three different configurations - stowed, deployed, and half-deployed - and confirmed that a 'negative torque' can arise under a non-symmetric deployment. This effect is under further investigation.


Related Links
Cassini-Huygens at ESA
Explore The Ring World of Saturn and her moons
Jupiter and its Moons
The million outer planets of a star called Sol
News Flash at Mercury


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Final images from Cassini spacecraft
Lancaster UK (SPX) Jan 15, 2020
Researchers are busy analysing some of the final data sent back from the Cassini spacecraft which has been in orbit around Saturn for more than 13 years until the end of its mission in September 2017. For the last leg of its journey, Cassini was put on a particularly daring orbit passing between Saturn and its rings which brought it closer to Saturn than ever before. This allowed scientists to obtain images of Saturn's ultraviolet auroras in unprecedented resolution. The new observations are ... read more

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