@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ * * * SPACE + by Jeff Foust American Reporter Space Editor Cambridge, Mass. 12/8/95 galileo 701/$7.01 GALILEO'S JOVIAN DEBUT A BLAZING SUCCESS by Jeff Foust American Reporter Space Editor PASADENA -- After a six-year, 2.3-billion-mile journey, the Galileo spacecraft successfully arrived at the planet Jupiter Thursday, as the main spacecraft entered orbit and the probe entered Jupiter's atmosphere. "Is this a great day or what?" NASA administrator Dan Goldin said Thursday night at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), mission control for Galileo. Goldin spoke at a press conference after Thursday's events. Two critical events took place late Thursday: the entry of the Galileo Probe into Jupiter's atmosphere, and a thruster firing by the main Galileo spacecraft to put the vehicle into orbit around the planet. The failure of either event would have been a serious blow to the mission. Had the probe not correctly entered Jupiter's atmosphere and established contact with the orbiter, no atmospheric data would have been returned. If the thrusters had not fired, the spacecraft would have kept going away from Jupiter, never to return. Scientists and engineers at JPL waited anxiously as the probe approached Jupiter at 170,000 kmph (106,000 mph). After the probe entered Jupiter's atmosphere and slowed down to 400 kmph (250 mph), the probe would establish contact with the main spacecraft, which was about to enter orbit around Jupiter. The orbiter would record all the data sent by the probe. However, due to the low rate of the orbiter's antenna, it would only transit two "bursts" of information to Earth to let controllers know that the probe had established contact with the orbiter. The first burst of data was due shortly after 6pm EST. At 6:10pm, JPL reported that it had received the burst from the orbiter, reporting that it was receiving data from the probe. The full amount of data collected will not be know for some time. This Sunday Galileo will begin to playback some of the data received by the probe. Scientists hope to get up to the first 40 minutes of data by Wednesday. After Wednesday the orbiter will lose contact with the Earth as Jupiter passed behind the Sun as seen from Earth. Contact will be reestablished in January when Jupiter reappears. The rest of the data will be downloaded by February. After the orbiter finished collecting data from the probe, it prepared itself for a thruster firing called "Jupiter Orbital Insertion (JOI)" that would place the spacecraft into orbit around the planet. The main thruster on Galileo had to fire at least 46 minutes to place the spacecraft into the proper orbit. If the thrusters fired less than that time, the spacecraft would end up in the wrong orbit, or would escape Jupiter's gravity altogether. JOI began at about 8:20 p.m. EST. Controllers monitored the firing by watching the Doppler shift of the spacecraft's transmissions and watched the spacecraft's trajectory change. The thrusters burned for almost 49 minutes, three minutes longer than needed and within 22 seconds of the optimal time. Another, smaller thruster firing is scheduled for Sunday to make any corrections to the spacecraft's orbit. After Galileo finishes returning the probe data, controllers will upload new programs that will give the spacecraft improved data compression capabilities. The compression software, coupled with improvements in the ground stations, will allow Galileo to transmit data at a faster rate, improving on the poor rate of the low-gain antenna. As Galileo approached Jupiter, it passed less than 900 km (540 mi) of Io, one on Jupiter's four largest moons. Mission controllers had originally planned to take high-resolution images of Io during this time, but due to problems with the spacecraft's tape recorder, a higher priority was placed on recording the probe data. There will be no close approaches to Io for the rest of the mission, but planners have suggested sending Galileo back past Io after the main mission is completed. The success of the probe and the orbit insertion was cause for celebration at JPL. It was a great accomplishment for many of the people involved with the mission, who had been a part of the Galileo project since its inception 20 years ago. The success also eased the nerves of many workers. At Thursday night's press conference, one high-ranking official remarked, "We were never worried." His comment was met with roars of laughter. -30- * * * @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ ~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~--~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~ Posted by Richard K. Moore (•••@••.•••) Wexford, Ireland Cyber Rights co-leader | Cyberlib=http://www.internet-eireann.ie/cyberlib ~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~--~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~
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