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Home Science & Technology Science

ESA celebrate 10th anniversary of Cassini Huygens landing on Titan

byCustoms Today Report
19/01/2015
in Science, Science & Technology
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WASHINGTON: Ten years ago, European Space Agency ESA’s Huygens probe entered the history books by descending to the surface of Titan, the largest moon of Saturn. Humanity’s first successful attempt to land on an alien world in the outer Solar System took place on January 14, 2005.

With this feat, the Huygens probe accomplished humanity’s first landing on a moon in the outer solar system. Huygens was safely on Titan, the largest moon of Saturn.

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The hardy probe not only survived the descent and landing, but continued to transmit data for more than an hour on the frigid surface of Titan, until its batteries were drained.

Since that historic moment, scientists from around the world have pored over volumes of data about Titan, sent to Earth by Huygens — a project of the European Space Agency — and its mothership, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft.

In the past 10 years, data from the dynamic spacecraft duo have revealed many details of a surprisingly Earth-like world.

In addition to the technical wizardry needed to pull off this tour de force, international partnerships were critical to successfully delivering the two spacecraft to Saturn and Titan.

“A mission of this ambitious scale represents a triumph in international collaboration,” said Earl Maize, Cassini Project manager at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

“From the mission’s formal beginning in 1982, to Huygens’ spectacular landing 23 years later, to the present day, Cassini-Huygens owes much of its success to the tremendous synergy and cooperation between more than a dozen countries. This teamwork is still a major strength of the project as the Cassini orbiter continues to explore the Saturn system,” Maize said.

A decade ago, Titan was known as a hidden, hazy world. Findings made by NASA’s Cassini mission and the European Space Agency’s Huygens probe have unveiled Titan as an “alien Earth,” providing scientists with a unique world to explore.

Tags: Cassini Huygens landingCassini-HuygensESA celebrate ten years since Cassini Huygens landing on TitanESA’s Huygenslargest moon of SaturnNASA’s Cassini spacecraft.

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