Reaching for Saturn
Nine times wider and 95 times more massive than Earth, Saturn is a hydrogen and helium behemoth that resides far from our own life-friendly patch of cosmic real estate. Saturn’s roiling, storm-filled atmosphere, blustering 1,100 mph (1,770 km/h) equatorial winds, multitude of moons, and unique glittering rings — composed of trillions of unconnected, ice-encrusted particles — have captivated and intrigued astronomers for centuries.
In fact, two of those astronomers played such an important role in unveiling Saturn’s mysteries that they were honored by name with a landmark $3.26 billion mission.
CASSINI TIMELINE
Launch: Oct. 15, 1997 on a Titan IVB/Centaur rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida
Venus flybys: April 26, 1998, at 176 miles (234 km) and June 24, 1999, at 370 miles (600 km)
Earth flyby: Aug. 18, 1999, at 727 miles (1,170 km)
Jupiter flyby: Dec. 30, 2000, at 6 million miles (10 million km)
Saturn arrival: July 1, 2004 (June 30 in California)
Giovanni Domenico Cassini (1625-1712) was an Italian-born, French-naturalized engineer, mathematician, and astronomer. He first identified a gap (the eponymous Cassini Division) between two of Saturn’s most prominent rings. Cassini also went on to discover four of Saturn’s moons, including peculiar, two-toned Iapetus.
Cassini’s name adorned the mission’s 22-foot-long (6.8-meter) NASA-built orbiter. The Cassini orbiter would ultimately circle Saturn 294 times between when it arrived at the gas giant in July 2004 (June 30 by the clocks at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California) and its Grand Finale in September 2017. Cassini scoured the planet in unrivaled detail using a dozen instruments, from visible, ultraviolet, and infrared sensors to radiometers, spectrometers, magnetometers, and a powerful radar imager.
Dutch physicist, astronomer, and mathematician Christiaan Huygens (1629-1695) was the namesake for an 9-foot-wide (2.7-meter) disk-shaped probe. The Huygens probe was built by the European Space Agency and designed to be dropped into the thick, hydrocarbon-soup atmosphere that cloaks Saturn’s largest moon, planet-sized Titan. (Titan is larger than Mercury and nearly the size of Mars.) After parachuting through Titan’s smoggy clouds in January 2005, the Huygens probe and its suite of six instruments triumphantly landed on a rocky surface never before seen by humanity, under a glowering orange sky.