Follow this link to skip to the main content
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
+ View the NASA Portal
Go!
JPL Home JPL Home Page - Earth JPL Home Page - Solar System JPL Home Page - Stars and Galaxies JPL Home Page - Technology
Cassini-Huygens: Mission to Saturn and Titan Cassini-Huygens: Mission to Saturn and Titan
California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Labaoratory NASA
For News Media
For Planetariums & More
For Educators
For Kids
Home
Overview
Multimedia
Cassini at Saturn
Mission
Spacecraft
Science
NEWS - Press Releases - 2002

Cassini Camera Lens is Clearing Up
May 16, 2002

Contact:
Alan Buis/JPL (818) 354-0474

NASA's Cassini spacecraft continues to fly in good health, speeding toward a July 1, 2004, appointment to begin orbiting Saturn.

Test images of a star taken last week provide strong encouragement that a haze problem noticed on a Cassini camera lens is clearing up as anticipated, said Robert Mitchell, Cassini-Huygens program manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

A 60-day period of warming the spacecraft's narrow-angle camera to a temperature just above freezing ended May 1. Heaters were built into the camera in anticipation of potential lens hazing; warming treatments have corrected similar hazing on other spacecraft.

Cassini's narrow-angle camera performed flawlessly for the spacecraft's December 2000 flyby of Jupiter. The haze first appeared last year, during the cruise between Jupiter and Saturn. Warming the camera to 4 degrees Celsius (39 degrees Fahrenheit) for eight days ending in January 2002 produced improvements, so the same heating was repeated for 60 days.

The new test images of the bright star Spica show that, by one measure, at least 90 percent of the image diffusion originally caused by the lens haze has been corrected. The improvement may actually be greater, because the new images were taken at a temperature warmer than the camera's optimal operating temperature of about minus 90 C (minus 130 F). Another warming treatment, to last 26 days, began May 9.

Additional information about Cassini is available online at:

http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov.

Cassini will reach Saturn on July 1, 2004, and release its piggybacked Huygens probe about six months later for descent through the thick atmosphere of the moon Titan on Jan. 14, 2005. Cassini-Huygens is a cooperative mission of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C.

Media Relations Office
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
California Institute of Technology
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Pasadena, Calif. 91109.
Telephone (818) 354-5011

Privacy Statement Glossary Sitemap FAQ
FirstGov NASA
Outreach Manager: Alice Wessen
Editor: Kirk Munsell
Science Writer: Enrico Piazza
Webmaster: Allan Yu.
Last Updated: 04.06.2005
JPL Clearance: CL02-2452
+ Contact Us