WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.100 --> 00:00:06.006 [ Music ] 2 00:00:06.006 --> 00:00:07.841 My name is Michael Flasar and I am the principal 3 00:00:07.841 --> 00:00:11.178 investigator of the Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer, 4 00:00:11.178 --> 00:00:13.013 otherwise known as CIRS. 5 00:00:13.013 --> 00:00:14.147 My name is Conor Nixon. 6 00:00:14.147 --> 00:00:16.516 I'm a planetary scientist here at NASA Goddard Space Flight 7 00:00:16.516 --> 00:00:19.353 Center, and I study Saturn and its amazing system of moons and 8 00:00:19.353 --> 00:00:22.022 rings using the Composite Infrared Spectrometer on the 9 00:00:22.022 --> 00:00:23.190 Cassini spacecraft. 10 00:00:23.190 --> 00:00:24.358 My name is Carrie Anderson. 11 00:00:24.358 --> 00:00:27.127 I work at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and I'm a 12 00:00:27.127 --> 00:00:29.363 co-investigator on the CIRS team. 13 00:00:29.363 --> 00:00:33.133 Cassini is the mission that was to study the Saturn system, and 14 00:00:33.133 --> 00:00:34.701 has studied the Saturn system. 15 00:00:34.701 --> 00:00:37.838 It consisted of a spacecraft that orbits Saturn and studies 16 00:00:37.838 --> 00:00:41.141 all the other satellites in the system, and the rings. 17 00:00:41.141 --> 00:00:45.245 But it also had a probe, and its probe landed on Titan. 18 00:00:45.245 --> 00:00:48.549 Before Cassini, the previous flagship was Voyager. 19 00:00:48.549 --> 00:00:51.752 That flew by the Saturn system in 1980, Voyager 1. 20 00:00:51.752 --> 00:00:54.154 In 1981 was Voyager 2. 21 00:00:54.154 --> 00:00:55.923 Those were just flyby missions. 22 00:00:55.923 --> 00:00:59.026 Cassini went into orbit around Saturn, which was the first 23 00:00:59.026 --> 00:01:01.695 time, very historical, this had never happened. 24 00:01:01.695 --> 00:01:04.998 Off-screen: And liftoff of the Cassini spacecraft on a 25 00:01:04.998 --> 00:01:06.800 billion-mile trek to Saturn! 26 00:01:06.800 --> 00:01:10.837 The spacecraft launched in 1997 and after a long, seven-year 27 00:01:10.837 --> 00:01:14.608 cruise, it arrived at Saturn, did a dramatic entry burn into 28 00:01:14.608 --> 00:01:17.110 orbit around Saturn, and then commenced a wondrous, 29 00:01:17.110 --> 00:01:20.547 thirteen-year mission to explore the entire system of moons and 30 00:01:20.547 --> 00:01:22.449 rings around Saturn. 31 00:01:22.449 --> 00:01:25.686 CIRS is Cassini's Composite Infrared Spectrometer, built at 32 00:01:25.686 --> 00:01:28.255 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, and this instrument is 33 00:01:28.255 --> 00:01:31.959 designed to measure thermal infrared radiation, or heat, and 34 00:01:31.959 --> 00:01:34.561 split it up into different wavelengths and measure the 35 00:01:34.561 --> 00:01:36.797 intensity of each one of these wavelengths. 36 00:01:36.797 --> 00:01:39.299 The other thing is, it's a chemical assayer. 37 00:01:39.299 --> 00:01:42.936 These molecules in the atmosphere, ethane, methane, 38 00:01:42.936 --> 00:01:45.939 hydrogen, these molecules have distinct signatures in the 39 00:01:45.939 --> 00:01:46.907 spectrum. 40 00:01:46.907 --> 00:01:49.242 They're their fingerprints. 41 00:01:49.242 --> 00:01:52.379 TEXT ON SCREEN: After arriving in 2004, Cassini began observing 42 00:01:52.379 --> 00:01:55.215 Saturn and its moons in the infrared using CIRS. 43 00:01:55.215 --> 00:01:57.651 CIRS carried out over 1.4 million commands and 44 00:01:57.651 --> 00:01:59.886 collected terabytes of data and image products. 45 00:01:59.886 --> 00:02:02.422 Here are some of the instrument's Greatest Hits. 46 00:02:05.425 --> 00:02:08.462 So in 2010, there was a giant outburst in Saturn's northern 47 00:02:08.462 --> 00:02:09.463 hemisphere. 48 00:02:09.463 --> 00:02:13.100 A giant storm eruption occurred, and eventually this spread 49 00:02:13.100 --> 00:02:16.603 around to encircle the entire globe at a latitude width about 50 00:02:16.603 --> 00:02:18.538 the extent of North America. 51 00:02:18.538 --> 00:02:21.942 Imaging first picked it up, and it was, it was massive. 52 00:02:21.942 --> 00:02:26.079 From north to south it spanned about nine thousand miles. 53 00:02:26.079 --> 00:02:28.448 CIRS saw temperature increase like we've never recorded 54 00:02:28.448 --> 00:02:29.516 before. 55 00:02:29.516 --> 00:02:33.420 CIRS, looking with its thermal infrared eyes, was able to see 56 00:02:33.420 --> 00:02:37.624 two bright beacons of hotspot temperatures shining about 150 57 00:02:37.624 --> 00:02:39.459 degrees brighter than the surroundings. 58 00:02:39.459 --> 00:02:41.695 We, all of a sudden we had these two bright spots. 59 00:02:41.695 --> 00:02:45.098 After a month or two they merged, which was kind of 60 00:02:45.098 --> 00:02:48.468 curious, and then it persisted for another two years. 61 00:02:48.468 --> 00:02:52.139 In fact, it persisted longer than the tropospheric storm. 62 00:02:52.139 --> 00:02:54.741 Typically on Saturn these occur about every twenty to thirty 63 00:02:54.741 --> 00:02:58.378 years, this is the sixth one that's been seen since 1876. 64 00:02:58.378 --> 00:03:01.381 And Cassini was lucky enough to be there at the right place at 65 00:03:01.381 --> 00:03:04.451 the right time to see this storm eruption. 66 00:03:04.451 --> 00:03:08.221 Mimas and Tethys are two of I believe the last count was about 67 00:03:08.221 --> 00:03:12.859 sixty-two moons that Saturn has, and these are examples of these 68 00:03:12.859 --> 00:03:16.229 icy satellites, two of Saturn's icy satellites. 69 00:03:16.229 --> 00:03:18.999 When you just take images with Cassini they look normal. 70 00:03:18.999 --> 00:03:21.968 With Mimas it looks like the Death Star, you know, and then 71 00:03:21.968 --> 00:03:24.571 you superimpose the thermal maps from CIRS on it. 72 00:03:24.571 --> 00:03:27.007 And when you superimpose the thermal maps, it looks like 73 00:03:27.007 --> 00:03:28.175 Pac-Man. 74 00:03:28.175 --> 00:03:31.445 Mimas was an example where we saw very warm temperatures 75 00:03:31.445 --> 00:03:36.149 surrounding a very cold region, as if it was going to, you know, 76 00:03:36.149 --> 00:03:37.551 chomp it up. 77 00:03:37.551 --> 00:03:40.854 Turns out the explanation is kind of, is interesting. 78 00:03:40.854 --> 00:03:44.591 The way these are created is due to their orbital orientation as 79 00:03:44.591 --> 00:03:45.959 they go around Saturn. 80 00:03:45.959 --> 00:03:49.463 They have a leading side, which is always towards the front of 81 00:03:49.463 --> 00:03:51.431 its motion, and a trailing side. 82 00:03:51.431 --> 00:03:54.935 And the leading side is intensely bombarded by radiation 83 00:03:54.935 --> 00:03:56.369 from Saturn's magnetosphere. 84 00:03:56.369 --> 00:03:59.473 So the high-energy particle bombardment is causing this 85 00:03:59.473 --> 00:04:04.144 fluffy surface, this icy, fluffy surface, to be packed down to a 86 00:04:04.144 --> 00:04:09.216 very hard, solid ice surface, and you're changing the way now 87 00:04:09.216 --> 00:04:13.320 the surface can heat up and cool down over the course of a day 88 00:04:13.320 --> 00:04:14.421 for these moons. 89 00:04:14.421 --> 00:04:17.858 When we look at these in infrared we see a cooler region 90 00:04:17.858 --> 00:04:21.261 on the leading hemisphere, and a warmer region surrounding it. 91 00:04:21.261 --> 00:04:23.630 And this gives the exact appearance of these Pac-Man 92 00:04:23.630 --> 00:04:25.632 features that we so know and love. 93 00:04:28.969 --> 00:04:32.272 Enceladus is a very small, icy moon of Saturn. 94 00:04:32.272 --> 00:04:34.741 It's about three hundred miles in diameter. 95 00:04:34.741 --> 00:04:38.445 It's a moon that we weren't expecting to see a lot from, and 96 00:04:38.445 --> 00:04:41.414 it's had a huge impact on the Saturn system. 97 00:04:41.414 --> 00:04:44.518 Previously, we had hints that this moon may be active 98 00:04:44.518 --> 00:04:46.586 stretching all the way back to the Voyager mission. 99 00:04:46.586 --> 00:04:50.757 But when Cassini arrived, it was able to detect curtains of icy 100 00:04:50.757 --> 00:04:53.193 material venting into space. 101 00:04:53.193 --> 00:04:56.329 Then using the CIRS instrument, we were able to zoom in on the 102 00:04:56.329 --> 00:04:59.366 south pole, and see the south pole was much warmer than we 103 00:04:59.366 --> 00:05:00.333 expected. 104 00:05:00.333 --> 00:05:04.571 The pattern of temperatures on Enceladus did not match a simple 105 00:05:04.571 --> 00:05:07.541 inert body absorbing sunlight and reradiating it. 106 00:05:07.541 --> 00:05:10.177 The question was what to make of all this. 107 00:05:10.177 --> 00:05:13.246 The community decided it must be tidal friction, tidal heating, 108 00:05:13.246 --> 00:05:15.415 as Enceladus orbits Saturn. 109 00:05:15.415 --> 00:05:18.485 This tells us that Enceladus is being heated up by the action of 110 00:05:18.485 --> 00:05:19.686 Saturn's gravity. 111 00:05:19.686 --> 00:05:22.322 Inside Enceladus, we now know that there's a liquid water 112 00:05:22.322 --> 00:05:25.292 ocean, and it's this ocean which is venting through these cracks 113 00:05:25.292 --> 00:05:26.459 into space. 114 00:05:26.459 --> 00:05:28.328 Throughout the mission, we've learned that it has a 115 00:05:28.328 --> 00:05:31.164 subsurface, liquid-water environment. 116 00:05:31.164 --> 00:05:34.501 And with NASA, when you see liquid water, it's "Follow the 117 00:05:34.501 --> 00:05:37.637 water," because that's important for life. 118 00:05:39.206 --> 00:05:41.942 Titan was one of the major objectives of Cassini. 119 00:05:41.942 --> 00:05:45.912 We knew from Voyager that Titan was an organic molecule 120 00:05:45.912 --> 00:05:49.049 paradise, it just was filled with organic molecules. 121 00:05:49.049 --> 00:05:52.319 But maybe one of the key things about Cassini was, instead of a 122 00:05:52.319 --> 00:05:56.189 flyby past the Saturn system, Cassini hung around for thirteen 123 00:05:56.189 --> 00:05:57.257 years. 124 00:05:57.257 --> 00:05:59.526 And during that time, even though we were orbiting Saturn, 125 00:05:59.526 --> 00:06:03.563 we flew by Titan a hundred and twenty-five times. 126 00:06:03.563 --> 00:06:07.300 Titan, at visible wavelengths, looks like as everyone has seen, 127 00:06:07.300 --> 00:06:09.869 a orange-y, hazy moon. 128 00:06:09.869 --> 00:06:14.341 When Cassini was built, we put on spectrometers that could see 129 00:06:14.341 --> 00:06:18.511 to longer wavelengths, outside of the eye's visible range. 130 00:06:18.511 --> 00:06:22.749 And so we removed the veil of this smog, we peeled it back. 131 00:06:22.749 --> 00:06:26.253 Lo and behold, we saw this amazing, very active surface. 132 00:06:26.253 --> 00:06:30.790 River channels, and dunes, and we found polar lakes. 133 00:06:30.790 --> 00:06:33.593 And we never saw this before because we couldn't penetrate 134 00:06:33.593 --> 00:06:35.996 this very opaque, hazy atmosphere. 135 00:06:39.833 --> 00:06:42.335 In 2013, we made a fascinating discovery about Titan's 136 00:06:42.335 --> 00:06:43.403 atmosphere. 137 00:06:43.403 --> 00:06:46.006 We discovered a new molecule, which hadn't been previously 138 00:06:46.006 --> 00:06:46.973 detected. 139 00:06:46.973 --> 00:06:50.410 And this is called propylene, and this molecule, on the Earth, 140 00:06:50.410 --> 00:06:51.645 serves a variety of purposes. 141 00:06:51.645 --> 00:06:54.748 In fact, it's one of the raw ingredients that we use to make 142 00:06:54.748 --> 00:06:58.318 a type of hard rubbery plastic commonly known as Tupperware, 143 00:06:58.318 --> 00:06:59.719 which we use in our lunch boxes. 144 00:06:59.719 --> 00:07:03.323 And it was really incredible to find this molecule just floating 145 00:07:03.323 --> 00:07:04.758 around in Titan's atmosphere. 146 00:07:04.758 --> 00:07:07.594 Going all the way back to the Voyager mission thirty-two years 147 00:07:07.594 --> 00:07:10.664 earlier, we'd seen a lighter molecule and a heavier molecule 148 00:07:10.664 --> 00:07:12.332 in the same chemical family. 149 00:07:12.332 --> 00:07:15.101 But there was a gap at a particular molecular mass, a 150 00:07:15.101 --> 00:07:17.637 particular size of molecule that we just couldn't see anything 151 00:07:17.637 --> 00:07:18.638 in. 152 00:07:18.638 --> 00:07:22.242 So this discovery, using CIRS, filled in this puzzle piece, 153 00:07:22.242 --> 00:07:25.145 which had been completely outstanding for about thirty-two 154 00:07:25.145 --> 00:07:26.980 years. 155 00:07:30.950 --> 00:07:34.587 Cassini's Grand Finale is now underway as we dive repeatedly 156 00:07:34.587 --> 00:07:37.490 over the planet's north pole, and through the gap between the 157 00:07:37.490 --> 00:07:39.059 planet and its innermost rings. 158 00:07:39.059 --> 00:07:41.061 We're making gravity measurements and magnetic field 159 00:07:41.061 --> 00:07:43.096 measurements, and this is information that we didn't get 160 00:07:43.096 --> 00:07:45.632 earlier in the mission so in many ways it's like having a 161 00:07:45.632 --> 00:07:47.801 whole new spacecraft mission. 162 00:07:47.801 --> 00:07:52.138 Finally, on the very last orbit, Cassini will go closer to Saturn 163 00:07:52.138 --> 00:07:54.174 and eventually burn up in its upper atmosphere. 164 00:07:54.174 --> 00:07:57.344 The spacecraft will disintegrate and become a permanent part of 165 00:07:57.344 --> 00:07:58.545 Saturn. 166 00:07:58.545 --> 00:08:00.180 It's a bittersweet moment for us. 167 00:08:00.180 --> 00:08:02.882 We're so used to doing Cassini, we'll miss it. 168 00:08:02.882 --> 00:08:05.485 As far as what CIRS has accomplished, the excitement 169 00:08:05.485 --> 00:08:08.922 about the Enceladus south pole has to rank high. 170 00:08:08.922 --> 00:08:12.792 The complex dynamics of Saturn and its storms. 171 00:08:12.792 --> 00:08:15.128 Titan, just being able to see Titan. 172 00:08:15.128 --> 00:08:18.965 The point is that if you don't go up close and take the data, 173 00:08:18.965 --> 00:08:19.933 you get nothing. 174 00:08:19.933 --> 00:08:22.736 If you do take the data, there's no guarantee you're going to 175 00:08:22.736 --> 00:08:25.338 solve all the problems, but on the other hand at least you've 176 00:08:25.338 --> 00:08:27.307 made the effort to acquire something and to ask 177 00:08:27.307 --> 00:08:28.842 other questions. 178 00:08:28.842 --> 00:08:33.179 This mission and the amount of data it's recorded goes beyond 179 00:08:33.179 --> 00:08:34.447 just one object. 180 00:08:34.447 --> 00:08:37.450 Titan has always been my true love, but I also have learned to 181 00:08:37.450 --> 00:08:40.720 really appreciate other moons in Saturn's system, for example, 182 00:08:40.720 --> 00:08:41.788 Iapetus. 183 00:08:41.788 --> 00:08:45.325 It has this amazing dark-leading hemisphere, but its trailing 184 00:08:45.325 --> 00:08:47.761 hemisphere is bright like snow. 185 00:08:47.761 --> 00:08:49.662 It's been called the yin and yang moon. 186 00:08:49.662 --> 00:08:52.365 One of the moons called Pan, it's embedded in Saturn's 187 00:08:52.365 --> 00:08:54.667 A-Ring, and it causes this gap. 188 00:08:54.667 --> 00:08:57.203 Pan looks like a flying saucer. 189 00:08:57.203 --> 00:09:01.141 These kind of things, you can't have unless you're in orbit 190 00:09:01.141 --> 00:09:03.610 around such a magnificent planet. 191 00:09:03.610 --> 00:09:06.279 And the data we've taken from this system, I have no doubt 192 00:09:06.279 --> 00:09:08.748 will be used for decades to come, and I only hope we can go 193 00:09:08.748 --> 00:09:11.117 back one day. 194 00:09:11.117 --> 00:09:13.620 [ Music ] 195 00:09:13.620 --> 00:09:23.062 [ Satellite beeping ]