The Cassini spacecraft successfully performed a critical six-minute trajectory correction maneuver May 27th to put it on course with its first encounter, Saturn’s outermost moon Phoebe, set for June 11th. The spacecraft is operating normally and is in excellent health. “The maneuver is very critical for getting us into Saturn orbit because it is the first checkout of the bipropellant pressurization system after nearly five years of dormancy,” said Todd Barber, propulsion engineer for Cassini at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Cassini-Huygens Mission Status Report
Posted by: ECT News Science Desk June 11, 2004 09:04 AMThe Cassini spacecraft successfully performed a critical six-minute trajectory correction maneuver May 27th to put it on course with its first encounter, Saturn’s outermost moon Phoebe, set for June 11th. The spacecraft is operating normally and is in excellent health. “The maneuver is very critical for getting us into Saturn orbit because it is the first checkout of the bipropellant pressurization system after nearly five years of dormancy,” said Todd Barber, propulsion engineer for Cassini at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.