• → European Space Agency

      • Space for Europe
      • Space News
      • Space in Images
      • Space in Videos
    • About Us

      • Welcome to ESA
      • DG's News and Views
      • For Member State Delegations
      • Business with ESA
      • ESA Exhibitions
      • ESA Publications
      • Careers at ESA
    • Our Activities

      • Space News
      • Observing the Earth
      • Human Spaceflight
      • Launchers
      • Navigation
      • Space Science
      • Space Engineering
      • Operations
      • Technology
      • Telecommunications & Integrated Applications
    • For Public

    • For Media

      • Media
      • ESA TV
      • Videos for professionals
      • Photos
    • For Educators

    • For Kids

    • ESA

    • ESA Science

    • Cassini-Huygens

    • Unique insights into a ringed world

      • Striking sights of a ringed world...
      • Solving the puzzles of Saturn and Titan
    • About Cassini-Huygens

      • Cassini-Huygens mission facts
      • The mission
      • Cassini spacecraft
      • Cassini instruments
      • Huygens spacecraft
      • Huygens instruments
      • The launcher
    • About Saturn

      • Facts about Saturn
      • Saturn's rings
      • Saturn's moons
      • Saturn's atmosphere
      • Saturn's magnetosphere
    • About Titan

      • Facts about Titan
      • Titan's atmosphere
      • Titan's surface
      • Life on Titan?
    • Meet the team

      • International collaboration
      • Huygens Mission Team
      • Cassini Project Team
      • ASI Programme Manager
      • Huygens investigators
      • Cassini orbiter investigators (1)
      • Cassini orbiter investigators (2)
    • Multimedia
    • VideoTalk
    • Cassini-Huygens images
    • Cassini-Huygens videos
    • Titan virtual tour
    • Hygens probe descent - multilingual CD-rom
    • Download wallpapers
    • Download screensavers
    • 3D Flash 'model'
    • SOI animation
    • Waiting for Titan - the human side of Huygens
    • Services
    • Comments

    ESA > Our Activities > Space Science > Cassini-Huygens

    Cassini-Huygens mission celebrates anniversary

    Cassini-Huygens prepares for separation
    15 October 2005

    On the eighth anniversary of the launch of the NASA/ESA/ASI Cassini-Huygens spacecraft, the teams involved can look back at a string of remarkable discoveries.

    The Cassini-Huygens mission is one of the largest and most advanced planetary exploration missions ever launched. It consists of two parts - the Cassini orbiter and the Huygens probe. Cassini is currently orbiting Saturn and taking pictures and measurements of Saturn and its moons, rings and magnetosphere. Huygens successfully parachuted down through the atmosphere of Titan, Saturn's largest moon, at the start of 2005.

    The mission was launched on 15 October 1997 and took nearly seven years to reach Saturn, arriving on 1 July 2004. The route it took to Saturn involved fly-bys of Venus, Earth and Jupiter to help give it the energy necessary to reach Saturn.

    The Saturnian system

    Saturn itself is the second largest planet in the Solar System. It is made of gas with a solid core and a liquid layer, and is famous for its rings which are made chiefly of ice with some rocky material acting as a colouring agent.

    So far, it also has 34 named moons (47 in total), including Titan that is known to have a thick nitrogen atmosphere rich in methane and is thought to bear similarities with our planet in its ‘pre-biotic’ stage (just before life began).

    Since arriving at Saturn on 1 July 2004, Cassini has taken over 35 000 images of Saturn and its magnificent rings and its amazing moons. Numerous discoveries have been made about the rings, the moons, the dynamic magnetosphere and the planet itself. Cassini's remarkable instruments provided the first glimpses of Titan’s surface and gained a global picture of this hazy world.


    First colour view of Titan's surface

    Cassini’s radar provided the first pictures of Titan's surface. The orbiter also provided the first detailed global view, including possible volcanoes, rain clouds, flow features, lakes, craters and vast dune fields, as well as other puzzling terrain. A soup of complex hydrocarbons, including benzene, has been detected in Titan's atmosphere.

    But the highlight of the mission so far is clearly the lifting of the veil on smog-covered Titan. At around 11:30 UT, 14 January 2005, ESA’s Huygens probe landed the surface of this distant world. This event makes it the only landing to take place in the outer Solar System and the furthest from Earth.

    The Huygens probe showed that Titan's surface has Earth-like processes and morphology, complete with evidence for methane rain, erosion, stream-like drainage channels and dry lake beds.

    For more information:

    Jean-Pierre Lebreton, ESA Huygens Mission Manager
    E-mail: jplebret @ rssd.esa.int

    Enrico Flamini, ASI Programme Manager
    E-mail: enrico.flamini @ asi.it

    Carolina Martinez, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, USA
    Tel: 001 818 354 9382

    Rate this

    Views

    Share

    • Currently 0 out of 5 Stars.
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5
    Rating: 0/5 (0 votes cast)

    Thank you for rating!

    You have already rated this page, you can only rate it once!

    Your rating has been changed, thanks for rating!

    42
    Tweet
    • At Saturn and Titan
    • Huygens raw images
    • First image of Titan
      First image of Titan
    • Sounds of Titan
    • Related articles
      • A simulated view from Huygens
        • Cassini-Huygens mission celebrates anniversary
          • Some Cassini-Huygens science highlights
            • Titan's surface seen from fly-by on 22 August 2005
              • Huygens 3D animation of Titan's surface
                • Saturn's moon Phoebe in 3D
                  • Cassini-Huygens looks at Phoebe's distant past
                    • Cassini finds atmosphere on Enceladus
                      • Cassini's Hyperion fly-by
                      • Related links
                      • NASA JPL Cassini-Huygens site
                      • Italian Space Agency (ASI)
                      • Huygens DISR team

    Connect with us

    • RSS
    • Youtube
    • Twitter
    • Flickr
    • G+
    • Facebook
    • Livestream
    • Subscribe
    • App Store
    • LATEST ARTICLES
    • · Rare merger reveals secrets of gal…
    • · Watching for hazards: ESA opens as…
    • · ESA astronaut Timothy Peake set fo…
    • · Space drives e-mobility
    • · Proba-V opens its eyes
    • FAQ

    • Jobs at ESA

    • Site Map

    • Contacts

    • Terms and conditions