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{{Infobox spacecraft
| Name              = ''Galileo'' Orbiter
| Image             = [[Image:Galileo_arrival_at_Jupiter.gif|290px]]
| Caption           = ''Galileo'' is prepared for mating with the [[Inertial Upper Stage|IUS]] booster
| Organization      = [[NASA]]
| Major_Contractors =
| Mission_Type      = [[Orbiter]], Fly-by
| Flyby_Of          = [[Venus]], [[Earth]], [[951 Gaspra]], [[243 Ida]]
| Satellite_Of      = '''[[Jupiter]]'''
| Orbital_Insertion_Date = 1995-12-08 01:20:00 UTC
| Launch            = 1989-10-18 16:53:00 UTC
| Launch_Vehicle    = [[Space Shuttle Atlantis]] <br>[[Inertial Upper Stage]]
| Launch_Site       = [[Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39|KSC Launch Complex 39B]] <br>[[Kennedy Space Center]]
| Decay             =
| Mission_Duration  = December 8, 1995 - <br>September 21, 2003 <br><br>(deorbited 2003-09-21 18:57:00 UTC)
| NSSDC_ID          = 1989-084B
| Webpage           = [http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/galileo/ ''Galileo'' Project Home Page]
| Mass              = {{convert|2380|kg|abbr=on}}
| Power             = 570 W ([[Radioisotope thermoelectric generator|2 RTGs]])
| Orbital_elements  =
| Semimajor_Axis    =
| Eccentricity      =
| Inclination       =
| Orbital_Period    =
| Apoapsis          =
| Periapsis         =
| Orbits            =
}}
The four largest moons of Jupiter photographed by Galileo
Galileo captures a dynamic eruption at Tvashtar Catena, a chain of volcanic bowls on Jupiter's moon Io

Galileo was an unmanned spacecraft sent by NASA to study the planet Jupiter and its moons. Named after the astronomer and Renaissance pioneer Galileo Galilei, it was launched on October 18, 1989, by the Space Shuttle Atlantis on the STS-34 mission. It arrived at Jupiter on December 7, 1995, a little more than six years later, via gravitational assist flybys of Venus and Earth.

Despite antenna problems, Galileo conducted the first asteroid flyby near 951 Gaspra, discovered the first asteroid moon Dactyl around asteroid 243 Ida, was the first spacecraft to orbit Jupiter, and launched the first probe into Jupiter's atmosphere.[1]

The spacecraft measured atmospheric composition of Jupiter and directly observed ammonia clouds, which seems to be created from an outflow from lower depths. It also registered Io's volcanism and plasma interactions between the atmosphere with currents from Jupiter's atmosphere. Other studies gave support for the popular theory of liquid oceans under the icy surface of Europa. There was also indications of similar liquid-saltwater layers under the surfaces of Ganymede and Callisto, while Ganymede was shown to possess a magnetic field. New evidence was also found for existence of exospheres around Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto.[1]

It was discovered that Jupiter's faint ring system is formed by dust from impacts on the four small inner moons. The extent and structure of Jupiter's magnetosphere was also mapped.[1]

Galileo was the only direct observation point of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9's impact into the atmosphere of Jupiter.[1]

On September 21, 2003, after 14 years in space and 8 years of service in the Jovian system, Galileo's mission was terminated by sending the orbiter into Jupiter's atmosphere at a speed of nearly 50 kilometres per second to avoid any chance of it contaminating local moons with bacteria from Earth. Of particular concern was the ice-crusted moon Europa, which, thanks to Galileo, scientists now suspect harbors a salt water ocean beneath its surface.

Mission background[edit]

History[edit]

The primary science objectives of the mission include[2]:

Atmosphere of Jupiter

  • Determine the chemical composition.
  • Determine the structure to a depth of at least 10 bars.
  • Determine the nature of the cloud particles and location and structure of cloud layers.
  • Determine the difference between the amount of energy being received from the Sun and the amount of energy coming from inside Jupiter.
  • Investigate the wind patterns.
  • Investigate the upper atmosphere and ionosphere.

Satellites

  • Characterize the appearance, geology, and physical state of the surfaces.
  • Investigate the surface mineralogy and surface distribution of minerals.
  • Determine the gravitational and magnetic fields and dynamic properties.
  • Study the atmospheres, ionospheres, and extended gas clouds.
  • Study the interactions of the satellites with the magnetosphere.

Magnetosphere

  • Characterize the energy spectra, composition, and distribution of energetic particles throughout the magnetosphere.
  • Characterize the direction and strength of magnetic fields throughout the magnetosphere.
  • Characterize the plasma energy spectra, composition, and angular distribution throughout the magnetosphere.

Spacecraft design[edit]

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory built the Galileo spacecraft and managed the Galileo mission for NASA. Germany supplied the propulsion module. NASA's Ames Research Center managed the probe, which was built by Hughes Aircraft Company.
At launch, the orbiter and probe together had a mass of 2,564 kilograms (5,653 pounds) and was seven metres tall. One section of the spacecraft rotated at 3 rpm, keeping Galileo stable and holding six instruments that gathered data from many different directions, including the fields and particles instruments. The other section of the spacecraft was an antenna, and data were periodically transmitted to it. Back on the ground the mission operations team used software containing 650,000 lines of programming code in the orbit sequence design process; 1,615,000 lines in the telemetry interpretation; and 550,000 lines of code in navigation.

Attitude control and propulsion[edit]

The Propulsion Subsystem consisted of a 400 N main engine and twelve 10 N thrusters together with propellant, storage and pressurizing tanks, and associated plumbing. The 10 N thrusters were mounted in groups of six on two 2-meter booms. The fuel for the system was 925 kg of monomethylhydrazine and nitrogen tetroxide. Two separate tanks held another 7 kg of helium pressurant. The Propulsion Subsystem was developed and built by Daimler Benz Aero Space AG (DASA) (formerly Messerschmitt–Bölkow–Blohm (MBB)) and provided by Germany, the major international partner in Project Galileo.[3]

Communications[edit]

Main antenna failure
Fully deployed high-gain antenna.
Fully deployed high-gain antenna.
Partially deployed high-gain antenna.
Diagram of the antenna issue.
Diagram of the antenna issue.
Laboratory tests verified that holding ribs 9, 10, and 11 in the stowed position most nearly modeled the spacecraft telemetry.
For reasons which are not currently known, and in all likelihood will never be known with certainty, Galileo's high-gain antenna failed to fully deploy after its first flyby of Earth. Investigators speculate that during the time that Galileo spent in storage after the Challenger disaster, the lubricants evaporated, or the system was otherwise damaged. Engineers tried thermal cycling the antenna, rotating the spacecraft up to its maximum spin rate of 10.5 rpm, and "hammering" the antenna deployment motors - turning them on and off repeatedly - over 13,000 times; all attempts failed to open the high-gain antenna. Fortunately Galileo had an additional low-gain antenna that was capable of transmitting information back to Earth, though since it transmitted a signal isotropically, the low-gain antenna's bandwidth was significantly less than the high-gain antenna's would have been; the high-gain antenna was to have transmitted at 134 kilobits per second whereas the low-gain antenna was only intended to transmit at about 8 to 16 bits per second. Galileo's low-gain antenna transmitted with a power of about 15 to 20 watts, which, by the time it reached Earth, and had been collected by one of the large aperture (70 m) DSN antennas, had a total power of about -170 dBm or 10 zeptowatts (10 × 10−21 watts).[4] Through implementation of sophisticated data compression techniques, arraying of several Deep Space Network antennas and sensitivity upgrades of receivers used to listen to Galileo's signal, data throughput was increased to a maximum of 160 bits per second. The data collected on Jupiter and its moons was stored in the on board tape recorder, and transmitted back to Earth during the long apozene portion of the probe's orbit using the low-gain antenna. At the same time, measurements were made of Jupiter's magnetosphere and transmitted back to Earth. The reduction in available bandwidth reduced the total amount of data transmitted throughout the mission to about 30 gigabytes[dubious ] and reduced the number of pictures that were transmitted significantly; in all, only around 14,000 images were returned.

Power[edit]

Solar panels were not a practical solution for Galileo's power needs at Jupiter's distance from the Sun (it would have needed a minimum of 65 square metres (700 ft²) of solar panels); as for batteries, they would have been prohibitively massive. The solution adopted consisted of two radioisotope thermoelectric generators (RTGs). The RTGs powered the spacecraft through the radioactive decay of plutonium-238. The heat emitted by this decay was converted into electricity for the spacecraft through the solid-state Seebeck effect. This provided a reliable and long-lasting source of electricity unaffected by the cold space environment and high radiation fields such as those encountered in Jupiter's magnetosphere.
Each GPHS-RTG, mounted on a 5-meter long boom, carried 7.8 kilograms (17.2 lb) of 238Pu.[5] Each RTG contained 18 separate heat source modules, and each module encased four pellets of plutonium dioxide, a ceramic material resistant to fracturing. The modules were designed to survive a range of hypothetical accidents: launch vehicle explosion or fire, re-entry into the atmosphere followed by land or water impact, and post-impact situations. An outer covering of graphite provided protection against the structural, thermal, and eroding environments of a potential re-entry. Additional graphite components provided impact protection, while iridium cladding of the fuel cells provided post-impact containment. The RTGs produced about 570 watts at launch. The power output initially decreased at the rate of 0.6 watts per month and was 493 watts when Galileo arrived at Jupiter.
As the launch of Galileo neared, anti-nuclear groups, concerned over what they perceived as an unacceptable risk to the public's safety from Galileos RTGs, sought a court injunction prohibiting Galileos launch. RTGs had been used for years in planetary exploration without mishap: the Lincoln Experimental Satellites 8/9, launched by the U.S. Department of Defense, had 7% more plutonium on board than Galileo, and the two Voyager spacecraft each carried 80% as much plutonium as Galileo did. However, activists remembered the messy crash of the Soviet Union's nuclear-powered Cosmos 954 satellite in Canada in 1978, and the 1986 Challenger accident had raised public awareness of the possibility of explosive spacecraft failures. Also, no RTGs had ever been made to swing past the Earth at close range and high speed, as Galileos Venus-Earth-Earth Gravity Assist trajectory required it to do. This created a novel mission failure modality that might plausibly have entailed total dispersal of Galileos plutonium in the Earth's atmosphere. Scientist Carl Sagan, for example, a strong supporter of the Galileo mission, said in 1989 that "there is nothing absurd about either side of this argument." [6]
After the Challenger accident, a study considered additional shielding and eventually rejected it, in part because such a design significantly increased the overall risk of mission failure and only shifted the other risks around (for example, if a failure on orbit had occurred, additional shielding would have significantly increased the consequences of a ground impact).[5]

Computer[edit]

The CDH was actively redundant, with two parallel strings running at all times. It was composed of multiplexers (MUX), high-level modules (HLM), low-level modules (LLM), power converters (PC), bulk memory (BUM), data management subsystem bulk memory (DBUM), timing chains (TC), phase lock loops (PLL), Golay coders (GC), and hardware command decodes (HCD).
The spacecraft was controlled by six RCA 1802 Cosmac microprocessor CPUs: four on the spun side and two on the despun side. Each CPU was clocked at about 1.6 MHz, and fabricated on sapphire (Silicon on sapphire) which is a radiation-and static-hardened material ideal for spacecraft operation. This microprocessor was the first low-power CMOS processor chip, quite on a par with the 8-bit 6502 that was being built into the Apple II desktop computer at that time. Galileo's attitude control system software was written in the HAL/S programming language, also used in the Space Shuttle program.
Memory capacity provided by each BUM was 16K of RAM while the DBUMs each provided 8K of RAM. The BUMs and DBUMs provided storage for sequences and contain various buffers for telemetry data and interbus communication.
Every HLM and LLM was built up around a single 1802 microprocessor and 32K of RAM (for HLMs) or 16K of RAM (for LLMs). Two HLMs and two LLMs resided on the spun side while two LLMs were on the despun side.
Each HLM was responsible for the following functions:
1.) uplink command processing,
2.) maintenance of the spacecraft clock,
3.) movement of data over the data system bus,
4.) execution of stored sequences (time-event tables),
5.) telemetry control, and
6.) error recovery including system fault-protection monitoring and response.
Each LLM was responsible for the following functions:
1.) collect and format engineering data from the subsystems,
2.) provide the capability to issue coded and discrete commands to spacecraft users,
3.) recognize out-of-tolerance conditions on status inputs, and
4.) perform some system fault-protection functions.
Tape recorder anomalies and remote repair
Since Galileo's high-gain antenna failed to open in 1991 the mission was forced to use the low-gain antenna for all communication to Earth. This meant that data storage to Galileo's tape recorder for later compression and playback was absolutely crucial in order to obtain any substantial information from the planned Jupiter and moon flybys. In October 1995, Galileo's 114 megabyte (914,489,344 bits[7]), four-track digital tape recorder which was manufactured by Odetics Corporation, remained stuck in rewind mode for 15 hours before engineers learned what happened and sent commands to shut it off, after recording an image of Jupiter. Though the recorder itself was still in working order the malfunction possibly damaged a length of tape at the end of the reel. This section of tape was subsequently declared "off limits" to any future data recording and was covered with 25 more turns of tape to secure the section and reduce any further stresses, which could tear it. Because it happened only weeks before Jupiter Orbit Insertion, the anomaly prompted engineers to sacrifice data acquisition of almost all of the Io and Europa observations during Jupiter Orbit Insertion in order to focus solely on recording data sent from the Jupiter probe descent.
In November 2002, after completion of the mission's only encounter of Jupiter's moon Amalthea, problems with playback of the tape recorder would again plague the spacecraft. About 10 minutes after closest approach of the flyby Galileo stopped collecting data, shut down all of its instruments, and went into safe mode; apparently as a result of exposure to Jupiter's extremely high radiation environment. Though most of the Amalthea data was already written to tape, it was found that the recorder refused to respond to commands telling it to play back data. Through careful analysis[8] after weeks of troubleshooting of an identical flight spare of the recorder on the ground, it was determined that the cause of the malfunction was a reduction of light output in three infrared Optek OP133[9] light emitting diodes located in the drive electronics of the recorder's motor encoder wheel. The GaAs LEDs had been particularly sensitive to proton irradiation induced atomic lattice displacement defects, which greatly decreased their effective light output and caused the drive motor's electronics to falsely believe the motor encoder wheel was incorrectly positioned. Galileo's flight team then began a series of "annealing" sessions, where current was passed through the LEDs for hours at a time to heat them to a point where some of the crystalline lattice defects would be shifted back into place, thus increasing the LED's light output. After about 100 hours of annealing and playback cycles, the recorder was able to operate for up to an hour at a time. After many subsequent playback and cooling cycles, the complete transmission back to Earth of all recorded Amalthea flyby data was successful.

Scientific instruments[edit]

Scientific instruments to measure fields and particles were mounted on the spinning section of the spacecraft, together with the main antenna, power supply, the propulsion module and most of the Galileo computers and control electronics. The sixteen instruments, weighing 118 kg altogether, included magnetometer sensors mounted on an 11 m boom to minimize interference from the spacecraft; a plasma instrument for detecting low energy charged particles and a plasma wave detector to study waves generated by the particles; a high energy particle detector; and a detector of cosmic and Jovian dust. It also carried the Heavy Ion Counter, an engineering experiment added to assess the potentially hazardous charged particle environments the spacecraft flew through, and an added Extreme Ultraviolet detector associated with the UV spectrometer on the scan platform.
The despun section's instruments included the camera system; the near infrared mapping spectrometer to make multi-spectral images for atmospheric and moon surface chemical analysis; ultraviolet spectrometer to study gases; and photo-polarimeter radiometer to measure radiant and reflected energy. The camera system was designed to obtain images of Jupiter's satellites at resolutions from 20 to 1,000 times better than Voyager's best, because Galileo flew closer to the planet and its inner moons and because the CCD sensor in Galileo's camera was more sensitive and had a broader color detection band than the vidicons of Voyager.

De-spun section


Solid State Imager (SSI)


- see diagram

The SSI is an 800 by 800 pixel solid state camera consisting of an array of silicon sensors called a "charge coupled device" (CCD). Galileo was one of the first spacecraft to be equipped with CCD camera.[citation needed] The optical portion of the camera is built as a Cassegrain telescope. Light is collected by the primary mirror and directed to a smaller secondary mirror that channels it through a hole in the center of the primary mirror and onto the CCD. The CCD sensor is shielded from radiation, a particular problem within the harsh Jovian magnetosphere. The shielding is accomplished by means of a 10 mm thick layer of tantalum surrounding the CCD except where the light enters the system. An eight position filter wheel is used to obtain images at specific wavelengths. The images are then combined electronically on Earth to produce color images. The spectral response of the SSI ranges from about 0.4 to 1.1 micrometres. The SSI weighs 29.7 kilograms and consumes, on average, 15 watts of power. More
  • Principal investigator: Michael Belton / Kitt Peak National Observatory (website -archived)
Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (NIMS)


- see diagram

The NIMS instrument is sensitive from 0.7 to 5.2 micrometre wavelength IR light, overlapping the wavelength range of SSI. The telescope associated with NIMS is all reflective (uses mirrors and no lenses) with an aperture of 229 mm. The spectrometer of NIMS uses a grating to disperse the light collected by the telescope. The dispersed spectrum of light is focused on detectors of indium antimonide and silicon. The NIMS weighs 18 kilograms and uses 12 watts of power on average. More
  • Principal investigator: Robert Carlson / JPL / UCLA (website)
Ultraviolet Spectrometer(UVS)


- see diagram

The Cassegrain telescope of the UVS has a 250 mm aperture and collects light from the observation target. Both the UVS and EUV instruments use a ruled grating to disperse this light for spectral analysis. This light then passes through an exit slit into photomultiplier tubes that produce pulses or "sprays" of electrons. These electron pulses are counted, and these count numbers are the data that are sent to Earth. The UVS is mounted on the scan platform and can be pointed to an object in inertial space. The EUV is mounted on the spun section of the spacecraft. As Galileo spins, the EUV observes a narrow ribbon of space perpendicular to the spin axis. The two instruments combined weigh about 9.7 kilograms and use 5.9 watts of power. More
  • Principal investigator: Charles Hord / University of Colorado (website)
Extreme Ultraviolet Spectrometer (EUVS)


- see diagram

The Cassegrain telescope of the UVS has a 250 mm aperture and collects light from the observation target. Both the UVS and EUV instruments use a ruled grating to disperse this light for spectral analysis. This light then passes through an exit slit into photomultiplier tubes that produce pulses or "sprays" of electrons. These electron pulses are counted, and these count numbers are the data that are sent to Earth. The UVS is mounted on the scan platform and can be pointed to an object in inertial space. The EUV is mounted on the spun section of the spacecraft. As Galileo spins, the EUV observes a narrow ribbon of space perpendicular to the spin axis. The two instruments combined weigh about 9.7 kilograms and use 5.9 watts of power. More
  • Principal investigator: Charles Hord / University of Colorado (website)
Photopolarimeter-Radiometer (PPR)


- see diagram

The PPR has seven radiometry bands. One of these uses no filters and observes all the radiation, both solar and thermal. Another band lets only solar radiation through. The difference between the solar- plus-thermal and the solar-only channels gives the total thermal radiation emitted. The PPR also measured in five broadband channels that span the spectral range from 17 to 110 micrometres. The radiometer provides data on the temperatures of the Jovian satellites and Jupiter's atmosphere. The design of the instrument is based on that of an instrument flown on the Pioneer Venus spacecraft. A 100 mm aperture reflecting telescope collects light, directs it to a series of filters, and, from there, measurements are performed by the detectors of the PPR. The PPR weighs 5.0 kilograms and consumes about 5 watts of power. More
  • Principal investigator: James Hansen / Goddard Institute for Space Studies (website -archived)

Spun section


Dust Detector Subsystem (DDS)


- see diagram

The Dust Detector Subsystem (DDS) was used to measure the mass, electric charge, and velocity of incoming particles. The masses of dust particles that the DDS can detect go from 10−16 to 10−7 grams. The speed of these small particles can be measured over the range of 1 to 70 kilometers per second. The instrument can measure impact rates from 1 particle per 115 days (10 megaseconds) to 100 particles per second. These particles will help determine dust origin and dynamics within the magnetosphere. The DDS weighs 4.2 kilograms and uses an average of 5.4 watts of power. More
  • Principal investigator: Eberhard Grun / Max-Planck-Institut fur Kernphysik (website)
Energetic Particles Detector (EPD)


- see diagram

The energetic particles detector (EPD) is designed to measure the numbers and energies of ions and electrons whose energies exceed about 20 keV (3.2 fJ). The EPD can also measure the direction of travel of such particles and, in the case of ions, can determine their composition (whether the ion is oxygen or sulfur, for example). The EPD uses silicon solid state detectors and a time-of-flight detector system to measure changes in the energetic particle population at Jupiter as a function of position and time. These measurements will tell us how the particles get their energy and how they are transported through Jupiter's magnetosphere. The EPD weighs 10.5 kilograms and uses 10.1 watts of power on average. More
  • Principal investigator: Donald Williams / APL (website)
Heavy Ion Counter (HIC)


- see diagram

The HIC is really a repackaged and updated version of some parts of the flight spare of the Voyager Cosmic Ray System. The HIC detects heavy ions using stacks of single crystal silicon wafers. The HIC can measure heavy ions with energies as low as 6 MeV (1 pJ) and as high as 200 MeV (32 pJ) per nucleon. This range includes all atomic substances between carbon and nickel. The HIC and the EUV share a communications link and, therefore, must share observing time. The HIC weighs 8 kilograms and uses an average of 2.8 watts of power. More
  • Principal investigator: Prof. Edward C. Stone Jr. / Cal-Tech ([2])
Magnetometer (MAG)
The magnetometer (MAG) uses two sets of three sensors. The three sensors allow the three orthogonal components of the magnetic field section to be measured. One set is located at the end of the magnetometer boom and, in this position, is about 11 m from the spin axis of the spacecraft. The second set, designed to detect stronger fields, is 6.7 m from the spin axis. The boom is used to remove the MAG from the immediate vicinity of the spacecraft to minimize magnetic effects from the spacecraft. However, not all these effects can be eliminated by distancing the instrument. The rotation of the spacecraft is used to separate natural magnetic fields from engineering induced fields. Another source of potential error in measurement comes from bending and twisting of the long magnetometer boom. To account for these motions, a calibration coil is mounted rigidly on the spacecraft and puts out a reference magnetic field during calibrations. The magnetic field at the surface of the Earth has a strength of about 50,000 nT. At Jupiter, the outboard (11 m) set of sensors can measure magnetic field strengths in the range from ±32 to ±512 nT while the inboard (6.7 m) set is active in the range from ±512 to ±16,384 nT. The MAG experiment weighs 7 kilograms and uses 3.9 watts of power. More
  • Principal investigator: Margaret Galland Kivelson / University of California (website -BROKEN)
Plasma Subsystem (PLS)


- see diagram

The PLS uses seven fields of view to collect charged particles for energy and mass analysis. These fields of view cover most angles from 0 to 180 degrees, fanning out from the spin axis. The rotation of the spacecraft carries each field of view through a full circle. The PLS will measure particles in the energy range from 0.9 eV to 52 keV (0.1 aJ to 8.3 fJ). The PLS weighs 13.2 kilograms and uses an average of 10.7 watts of power. More
  • Principal investigator: Prof. Louis A. Frank / University of Iowa (website)
Plasma Wave Subsystem (PWS)
An electric dipole antenna is used to study the electric fields of plasmas, while two search coil magnetic antennas studied the magnetic fields. The electric dipole antenna is mounted at the tip of the magnetometer boom. The search coil magnetic antennas are mounted on the high-gain antenna feed. Nearly simultaneous measurements of the electric and magnetic field spectrum allowed electrostatic waves to be distinguished from electromagnetic waves. The PWS weighs 7.1 kilograms and uses an average of 9.8 watts. More
  • Principal investigator: Prof. Donald A. Gurnett / University of Iowa (website)
Radio Science (RS)
More / 2
  • Propagation principal investigator: Prof. Von R. Eshleman / Stanford University
  • Celestial mechanics principal investigator: Dr. John D. Anderson / JPL

Mission profile[edit]

Timeline of travel

Date Event

1989-10-18
Space shuttle vehicle launched at 16:53:39 UTC
1989-10-19
Spacecraft deployed from shuttle at 01:06:53 UTC
1990-02-07
1990-11-08
1991-10-29
Encounter with Gaspra at 22:36:46 UTC (1,600 km)
1992-11-08
1993-08-28
Encounter with Ida at 16:52:05 UTC (2400 km).
1994-07-16
Observation of Shoemaker-Levy 9
1995-07-13
Release of atmospheric probe at 05:30:00 UTC
1995-10-09
--name of event--
--name of event--

-references-


Launch and trajectory[edit]

Encounter with Venus[edit]

1st Encounter with Earth[edit]

Remote detection of life[edit]

The late Carl Sagan, pondering the question of whether life on Earth could be easily detected from space, devised a set of experiments in the late 1980s using Galileo's remote sensing instruments to determine if life indeed could be detected during the first Earth flyby of the mission in December 1990. After data acquisition and processing, Sagan et al. published a paper in Nature in 1993 detailing the results of the experiment. Galileo had found what are now referred to as the "Sagan criteria for life"; these were: strong absorption of light at the red end of the visible spectrum (especially over continents) which was caused by absorption by chlorophyll in photosynthesizing plants, absorption bands of molecular oxygen which is also a result of plant activity, infrared absorption bands caused by the ~1 micromole per mole (µmol/mol) of methane in Earth's atmosphere (a gas which must be replenished by either volcanic or biological activity) and modulated narrowband radio wave transmissions uncharacteristic of any known natural source. Galileo's experiments were thus the first ever controls in the newborn science of astrobiological remote sensing.

[22]

Encounter with Gaspra[edit]

On October 29, 1991, two months after entering the asteroid belt, Galileo performed the first ever asteroid encounter by passing about 1,600 kilometers (1,000 miles) from 951 Gaspra at a relative speed of about 8 kilometers per second (18,000 mph). Several pictures of Gaspra were taken along with measurements using the NIMS instrument to indicate composition and physical properties. The last (and best) two images were played back to Earth in November 1991 and June 1992. The imagery revealed a cratered and very irregular body about 19 by 12 by 11 kilometers (12 by 7.5 by 7 miles). The remainder of data taken, including low resolution images of more of the surface, were transmitted in late November 1992.[23]

2nd Encounter with Earth[edit]

The Galileo optical experiment[edit]

In December 1992 during Galileo's second gravity assist flyby of Earth, another groundbreaking yet almost entirely unpublicized experiment was done using Galileo to assess the possibility of optical communication with spacecraft by detecting pulses of light from powerful lasers which were to be directly imaged by Galileo's CCD. The experiment, dubbed Galileo OPtical EXperiment or GOPEX,[24] used two separate sites to beam laser pulses to the spacecraft, one at Table Mountain Observatory in California and the other at the Starfire Optical Range in New Mexico. The Table Mountain site used a frequency doubled Neodymium-Yttrium-Aluminium Garnet (Nd:YAG) laser operating at 532 nm with a repetition rate of ~15 to 30 Hz and a pulse power (FWHM) in the tens of megawatts range, which was coupled to a 0.6 meter Cassegrain telescope for transmission to Galileo; the Starfire range site used a similar setup with a larger transmitting telescope (1.5 m). Long exposure (~0.1 to 0.8 s) images using Galileo's 560 nm centered green filter produced images of Earth clearly showing the laser pulses even at distances of up to 6,000,000 km. Adverse weather conditions, restrictions placed on laser transmissions by the U.S. Space Defense Operations Center (SPADOC) and a pointing error caused by the scan platform acceleration on the spacecraft being slower than expected (which prevented laser detection on all frames with less than 400 ms exposure times) all contributed to the reduction of the number of successful detections of the laser transmission to 48 of the total 159 frames taken. Nonetheless, the experiment was considered a resounding success and the data acquired will likely be used in the future to design laser "downlinks" which will send large volumes of data very quickly, from spacecraft to Earth. The scheme is already being studied (as of 2004) for a data link to a future Mars orbiting spacecraft.[25]

Encounter with Ida[edit]

Twenty-two months after the Gaspra encounter, on August 28, 1993, Galileo flew within 2,400 kilometers (1,500 miles) of asteroid 243 Ida. The probe discovered that Ida had a small moon, dubbed Dactyl, only 1.4 km in diameter which was the first asteroid moon discovered. Measurements using Galileo's solid state imager, magnetometer and NIMS instrument were taken. From subsequent analysis of data, Dactyl appears to be an SII subtype S type asteroid and is spectrally different from 243 Ida. It is hypothesized that Dactyl may have been produced by partial melting within a Koronis parent body (Ida belongs to the "Koronis" family of asteroids that travels in the main Asteroid Belt between Mars and Jupiter) while the 243 Ida region escaped such igneous processing.

Observation of Shoemaker-Levy 9[edit]

Orbital Encounter with Jupiter[edit]

Timeline of observations

Date Event

-references-


Encounters with Io[edit]

Timeline of observations

Date Event

1999-10-10
1999-11-25
2000-02-22
Io-27
2001-08-06
Io-31
2001-10-15
Io-32
2002-01-17
Io-33

[26][27][28]

Encounters with Europa[edit]

Timeline of observations

Date Event

1997-02-17

[29] [30] [31] [32] [33] [34] [35] [36] [37] [38]

Encounters with Ganymede[edit]

Timeline of observations

Date Event

[39] [40] [41] [42]

Encounters with Callisto[edit]

Timeline of observations

Date Event

[43] [44] [45] [46] [47] [48] [49]

Mission overview[edit]

Galileo's launch had been significantly delayed by the hiatus in Space Shuttle launches that occurred after the Challenger space shuttle disaster. New safety protocols introduced as a result of the Challenger accident forced Galileo to use a lower-powered upper stage booster rocket, instead of a Centaur booster rocket, to send it from Earth orbit to Jupiter. Several gravitational slingshots, called a "VEEGA" or Venus Earth Earth Gravity Assist maneuver, provided the additional velocity required to reach its destination: Venus was flown by on February 10, 1990, and Earth twice, on December 8, 1990, and again on December 8, 1992. Along the way Galileo performed close observation of the asteroids 951 Gaspra (October 29, 1991) and 243 Ida (August 28, 1993), and discovered Ida's moon Dactyl. In 1994 Galileo was perfectly positioned to watch the fragments of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 crash into Jupiter. Terrestrial telescopes had to wait to see the impact sites as they rotated into view.

Galileo's prime mission was a two-year study of the Jovian system. The spacecraft traveled around Jupiter in elongated ellipses, each orbit lasting about two months. The differing distances from Jupiter afforded by these orbits allowed Galileo to sample different parts of the planet's extensive magnetosphere. The orbits were designed for close up flybys of Jupiter's largest moons. Once Galileo's prime mission was concluded, an extended mission followed starting on December 7, 1997; the spacecraft made a number of daring close flybys of Jupiter's moons Europa and Io. The closest approach was 180 km (112 mi) on October 15, 2001. The radiation environment near Io in particular was very unhealthy for Galileo's systems, and so these flybys were saved for the extended mission when loss of the spacecraft would be more acceptable.

Galileo's cameras were deactivated on January 17, 2002 after they had sustained irrecoverable radiation damage. NASA engineers were able to recover the damaged tape recorder electronics, and once more Galileo continued to return other scientific data until it was deorbited in 2003 as described above, performing one last scientific experiment —a measurement of Amalthea's mass as Galileo swung by.

Science performed by the Galileo Orbiter at Jupiter[edit]

Pwyll crater on Europa
Terrain on Ganymede

After arriving on December 7, 1995 and completing 35 orbits around Jupiter throughout a nearly eight year mission, the Galileo Orbiter was destroyed during a controlled impact with Jupiter on September 21, 2003. During that intervening time, Galileo forever changed the way scientists saw Jupiter and provided a wealth of information on the moons orbiting the planet which will be studied for years to come. Culled from NASA's press kit, the top orbiter science results were:

  • Galileo made the first observation of ammonia clouds in another planet's atmosphere. The atmosphere creates ammonia ice particles from material coming up from lower depths.
  • The moon Io was confirmed to have extensive volcanic activity that is 100 times greater than that found on Earth. The heat and frequency of eruptions are reminiscent of early Earth.
  • Complex plasma interactions in Io's atmosphere create immense electrical currents which couple to Jupiter's atmosphere.
  • Several lines of evidence from Galileo support the theory that liquid oceans exist under Europa's icy surface.
  • Ganymede possesses its own, substantial magnetic field - the first satellite known to have one.
  • Galileo magnetic data provide evidence that Europa, Ganymede and Callisto have a liquid-saltwater layer under the visible surface.
  • Evidence exists that Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto all have a thin atmospheric layer known as a 'surface-bound exosphere'.
  • Jupiter's ring system is formed by dust kicked up as interplanetary meteoroids smash into the planet's four small inner moons. The outermost ring is actually two rings, one embedded with the other. There is probably a separate ring along Amalthea's orbit, as well.
  • The Galileo spacecraft identified the global structure and dynamics of a giant planet's magnetosphere.

Other science conducted with Galileo[edit]

The Galileo star scanner[edit]

The star scanner was a small optical telescope used to provide the spacecraft with an absolute attitude reference. It was also able serendipitously to make scientific discoveries.[50] In the prime mission, it was found that the star scanner was able to detect high energy particles as a noise signal. These data were eventually calibrated to show the particles were predominantly > 2 MeV electrons that were trapped in the Jovian magnetic belts.

A second discovery occurred in 2000. The star scanner was observing a set of stars which included the second magnitude star Delta Velorum. At one point, this star dimmed for 8 hours below the star scanner's detection threshold. Subsequent analysis of Galileo data and work by amateur and professional astronomers showed that Delta Velorum is the brightest known eclipsing binary, brighter at maximum than even Algol.[51] It has a primary period of 45 days and the dimming is just visible with the naked eye.

A final discovery occurred during the last two orbits of the mission. When the spacecraft passed the orbit of Jupiter's moon Amalthea, the star scanner detected unexpected flashes of light that were reflections from moonlets. None of the individual moonlets were sighted twice, hence no orbits were determined and the moonlets did not meet the International Astronomical Union requirements to receive designations.[52] It is believed that these moonlets most likely are debris ejected from Amalthea and form a tenuous, and perhaps temporary, ring.

Image taken by Galileo of Earth during GOPEX test clearly showing bright laser pulses coming from a transmitting telescope on the night side. Galileo's imager was panned downward during the exposure to separate the pulses, thus blurring earth's image on the right.

Spacecraft malfunctions[edit]

Other radiation related anomalies[edit]

The uniquely harsh radiation environment at Jupiter caused over 20 anomalies in addition to the incidents expanded upon above. Despite exceeding its radiation design limit by at least a factor of three, the spacecraft survived all the anomalies. Several of the science instruments suffered increased noise while within about 700,000 km of Jupiter. The quartz crystal used as the frequency reference for the radio suffered permanent frequency shifts with each Jupiter approach. A spin detector failed and the spacecraft gyro output was biased by the radiation environment. The SSI camera began producing totally white images when the spacecraft was hit by the exceptional 'Bastille Day' coronal mass ejection in 2000 and subsequently on close approaches to Jupiter. The most severe effect was a reset of the computers (a CDS despun bus reset) that occurred when the spacecraft was either close to Jupiter or in the region of space magnetically downstream of the Earth. Work-arounds were found for all of these problems.

It is believed today that the accelerometer controlling the parachute's pyrotechnics was installed backwards. The same thing happened to the Genesis probe's sample return capsule when it returned to Earth in 2004. In that case, the parachute never opened, and the probe crashed in the desert of Utah.

Galileo's end[edit]

Once its fuel supply was nearly depleted, Galileo was intentionally commanded to crash into Jupiter to eliminate any chance of a future impact with Europa that could contaminate the icy moon. At the completion of its 35th and final circuit around the Jovian system, Galileo impacted the gas giant in darkness just south of the equator on September 21, 2003, at 18:57 GMT, at a speed of approximately 48.26 kilometers per second (nearly 108,000 mph).[53] In order to crash into Jupiter, Galileo was flown by Amalthea on November 5, 2002,[54] during its 34th orbit, allowing a measurement of the moon's mass as it passed within 163.0 ± 11.7 kilometres (100 mi) of its surface. Galileo then reached its greatest distance from Jupiter for the entire mission, some 26 million kilometers on April 14, 2003, before plunging back into the gas giant, taking a little less than nine months to do so.[55]

Galileo's atmospheric entry probe[edit]

{{Infobox spacecraft
| Name              = ''Galileo'' Probe
| Image             = [[Image:Galileo probe - artistic impression - AC89-0146-3.png|290px]]
| Caption           = The ''Galileo'' Probe Descent Module
| Organization      = [[NASA]]
| Major_Contractors =
| Mission_Type      = Atmospheric probe
| Launch            = July 13, 1995
| Launch_Vehicle    = [[Space Shuttle Atlantis]] <br>[[Inertial Upper Stage]] <br>[[Galileo (spacecraft)#The Galileo spacecraft|Galileo Orbiter]]
| Launch_Site       = [[Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39|KSC Launch Complex 39B]] <br>[[Kennedy Space Center]]
| Decay             =
| Mission_Duration  = December 7, 1995 <br><small>(57.6 minutes)</small>
| NSSDC_ID          = 1989-084E
| Webpage           = [http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/galileo/ ''Galileo'' Project Home Page]
| Mass              = {{convert|339|kg|abbr=on}}
| Power             = 580 W (LiSO<sub>2</sub> battery)
| Power_Source      = [[Lithium battery|lithium sulfur dioxide (LiSO<sub>2</sub>) batteries]]
| Orbital_elements  =
| Semimajor_Axis    =
| Eccentricity      = 1.03116
| Inclination       = 8.151°
| Orbital_Period    =
| Apoapsis          =
| Periapsis         = 0.9928 RJ
| Orbits            =
}}
Timeline of probe atmospheric entry.

The 339 kilogram atmospheric probe, built by Hughes Aircraft Company[56] at its El Segundo, California plant, measured about 1.3 meters across. Inside the heat shield, the scientific instruments were protected from ferocious heat during entry. The probe had to withstand extreme heat and pressure on its high speed journey at 47.8 km/s.

The probe was released from the main spacecraft in July 1995, five months before reaching Jupiter, and entered Jupiter's atmosphere with no braking beforehand. It was slowed from the probe's arrival speed of about 47 kilometers per second to subsonic speed in less than two minutes.

This was by far the most difficult atmospheric entry ever attempted; the probe had to withstand 230 g[57] and the probe's 152 kg heat shield made up almost half of the probe's total mass, and lost 80 kg during the entry.[58][59] NASA built a special laboratory, the Giant Planet Facility to simulate the heat load, which was similar to that of an ICBM-style straight-down reentry through a thermonuclear fireball.[60][61] It then deployed its 2.5-meter (8 ft) parachute, and dropped its heat shield.

As the probe descended through 150 kilometers of the top layers of the atmosphere, it collected 58 minutes of data on the local weather. It only stopped transmitting when ambient pressure exceeded 23 atmospheres and temperature reached 153 °C (307 °F).[62] The data was sent to the spacecraft overhead, then transmitted back to Earth. Each of 2 L-band transmitters operated at 128 bits per second and sent nearly identical streams of scientific data to the orbiter. All the probe's electronics were powered by lithium sulfur dioxide (LiSO2) batteries that provided a nominal power output of about 580 watts with an estimated capacity of about 21 ampere-hours on arrival at Jupiter.

Diagram of Galileo atmospheric entry probe instruments and subsystems.

The probe included six instruments for taking data on its plunge into Jupiter:

  • an atmospheric structure instrument group measuring temperature, pressure and deceleration,
  • a neutral mass spectrometer and
  • a helium-abundance interferometer supporting atmospheric composition studies,
  • a nephelometer for cloud location and cloud-particle observations,
  • a net-flux radiometer measuring the difference between upward and downward radiant flux at each altitude, and
  • a lightning/radio-emission instrument with an energetic-particle detector that measured light and radio emissions associated with lightning and energetic particles in Jupiter's radiation belts.

Total data returned from the probe was about 3.5 megabits (~458752 bytes). The probe stopped transmitting before the line of sight link with the orbiter was cut. The likely proximal cause of the final probe failure was overheating, which sensors indicated before signal loss.

The atmosphere through which the probe descended was somewhat more turbulent and hotter than expected. The probe was eventually completely destroyed as it continued to descend. The parachute would have melted first, roughly 30 minutes later,[63] then the aluminum components after another 40 minutes of free fall. The titanium structure would have lasted 6.5 hours more before disintegrating. Due to the high pressure, the droplets of metals from the probe would finally have vaporised once their critical temperature had been reached, and mixed with Jupiter's liquid metallic hydrogen interior.

Near failure of atmospheric probe parachute[edit]

The atmospheric probe deployed its first parachute about one minute later than anticipated, resulting in a small loss of upper atmospheric readings. Through review of records, the problem was later determined to likely be faulty wiring in the parachute control system. The fact that the chute opened at all was attributed to luck.[64]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Galileo End of Mission Press Kit
  2. ^ Ludwinski, J. (1996). The Galileo Tour Guide (PDF). Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  3. ^ Engineering
  4. ^ Galileo FAQ - Galileo's Antennas
  5. ^ a b What's in an RTG?
  6. ^ Sagan, Carl. "Benefit outweighs risk: Launch Galileo craft," USA Today, Inquiry Page, Tuesday, October 10, 1989 [1]
  7. ^ Galileo FAQ - Tape Recorder
  8. ^ http://parts.jpl.nasa.gov/docs/NSREC03_C6.pdf
  9. ^ http://www.optekinc.com/pdf/Op130.pdf
  10. ^ Belton, Michael J. S. "SSI - Solid State Imaging". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  11. ^ Carlson, Robert. "NIMS - Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  12. ^ Stewart, A. Ian F. "UVS - Ultraviolet Spectrometer". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  13. ^ Stewart, A. Ian F. "EUVS - Extreme Ultraviolet Spectrometer". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  14. ^ Hansen, James E. "PPR - Photopolarimeter-Radiometer". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  15. ^ Grun, Eberhard. "DDS - Dust Detector Subsystem". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  16. ^ Williams, D. J. "EPD - Energetic Particles Detector". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  17. ^ Stone, Edward. "HIC - Heavy Ion Counter". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  18. ^ Kivelson, Margaret G. "MAG - Magnetometer". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  19. ^ Frank, Lou. "PLS - Plasma Subsystem". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  20. ^ Gurnett, Donald A. "PWS - Plasma Wave Subsystem". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25.
  21. ^ Anderson, John. "Radio Science". NASA / JPL. Retrieved 2011-02-25. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  22. ^ C. Sagan, W. R. Thompson, R. Carlson, D. Gurnett, C. Hord (1993). "A search for life on Earth from the Galileo spacecraft". Nature. 365 (6448): 715–721. doi:10.1038/365715a0. PMID 11536539.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ Veverka, J.; Belton, M.; Klaasen, K.; Chapman, C. (1994). "Galileo's Encounter with 951 Gaspra: Overview". Icarus. 107 (1): 2–17. doi:10.1006/icar.1994.1002.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ Microsoft Word - GOPEX SPIE 1993 (Edited)
  25. ^ NASA To Test Laser Communications With Mars Spacecraft
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  27. ^ "Io Timeline - Io 25". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
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  29. ^ "Europa Timeline - Europa 4". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  30. ^ "Europa Timeline - Europa 6". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  31. ^ "Europa Timeline - Europa 11". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  32. ^ "Europa Timeline - Europa 12". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  33. ^ "Europa Timeline - Europa 14". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  34. ^ "Europa Timeline - Europa 15". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  35. ^ "Europa Timeline - Europa 16". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  36. ^ "Europa Timeline - Europa 17". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  37. ^ "Europa Timeline - Europa 18". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  38. ^ "Europa Timeline - Europa 19". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  39. ^ "Ganymede Timeline - Ganymede 1". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  40. ^ "Ganymede Timeline - Ganymede 2". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  41. ^ "Ganymede Timeline - Ganymede 7". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  42. ^ "Ganymede Timeline - Ganymede 8". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  43. ^ "Callisto Timeline - Callisto 3". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  44. ^ "Callisto Timeline - Callisto 9". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  45. ^ "Callisto Timeline - Callisto 10". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  46. ^ "Callisto Timeline - Callisto 20". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  47. ^ "Callisto Timeline - Callisto 21". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  48. ^ "Callisto Timeline - Callisto 22". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  49. ^ "Callisto Timeline - Callisto 23". NASA / Galileo Team. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  50. ^ http://www.mindspring.com/~feez/
  51. ^ IBVS 4999 (7 December 2000)
  52. ^ IAUC 8107: V4743 Sgr; OBJECTS NEAR JUPITER V (AMALTHEA); GRB 030329
  53. ^ Peter Bond, Spaceflight Now, 21 September 2003
  54. ^ Michael Meltzer, Mission to Jupiter: a History of the Galileo Project, NASA SP 2007-4231, p. 238
  55. ^ GEM Millennium Mission ephemeris compilation of reconstructed trajectory segments
  56. ^ Hughes Science/Scope Press Release and Advertisement, retrieved from Flight Global Archives May 23, 2010
  57. ^ Chu-Thielbar (2007-07-19). "Probing Planets: Can You Get There From Here?". Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  58. ^ Julio Magalhães (1997-09-17). "Galileo Probe Heat Shield Ablation". NASA Ames Research Center. Retrieved 2006-12-12.
  59. ^ Julio Magalhães (1996-12-06). "The Galileo Probe Spacecraft". NASA Ames Research Center. Retrieved 2006-12-12.
  60. ^ Laub, B. (6–9 October 2003). "Thermal Protection System Technology and Facility Needs for Demanding Future Planetary Missions" (PDF). International Workshop on Planetary Probe Atmospheric Entry and Descent Trajectory Analysis and Science. Lisbon, Portugal. Retrieved 2006-12-12. {{cite conference}}: Unknown parameter |booktitle= ignored (|book-title= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  61. ^ Bernard Laub (2004-10-19). "Development of New Ablative Thermal Protection Systems (TPS)". NASA Ames Research Center. Retrieved 2006-12-12.
  62. ^ Galileo Mission to Jupiter, NASA
  63. ^ Jonathan McDowell (1995-12-08). "Jonathan's Space Report, No. 267". Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. Retrieved 2007-05-06.
  64. ^ http://quest.nasa.gov/galileo/webchat/galtrans1.html

External links[edit]