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Cassini the NASA spacecraft that expanded the search for life beyond Earth dies in Saturn's sky

Cassini, the NASA spacecraft whose breakthrough discoveries about Saturn and its many moons revolutionized the search for life beyond Earth, disintegrated Friday morning in the skies above the ringed planet. It was one month shy of its 20th anniversary in space.

The explorer’s death was swift and deliberate. Traveling at 76,000 mph, it hurtled into the planet’s atmosphere shortly after 3:30 a.m. Pacific time and stopped communicating with Earth one minute later, according to NASA’s carefully choreographed plan. Within three more minutes, Cassini’s 12 scientific instruments were torn apart. Then they melted. Then they vaporized.

An investigator to the end, the spacecraft transmitted scientific data about Saturn’s atmosphere and the planet’s interior structure ​​​​​​throughout its final descent.

Cassini’s last signal to Earth was received at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge shortly before 5 a.m. “We left the world informed, but still wondering,” Earl Maize, program manager for the mission at JPL, said before Cassini’s fateful descent. “I couldn’t ask for more.”

Though Cassini became one of NASA’s most successful exploratory projects, it almost didn’t happen. On at least two occasions, NASA officials came close to pulling the plug over concerns about its budget, which rose to about $2.5 billion before launch and totaled $3.9 billion over the entire mission.

In 1991 and again in 1994, an international outcry spearheaded by ESA officials who had already sunk large amounts of time and money into Huygens saved the mission from the chopping block. (Cassini’s planned twin, known as Comet Rendezvous and Asteroid Flyby, was canceled in 1992.)

“Now everybody looks back at the spectacular success, but there were some really dark days in the early ’90s,” said Julie Webster, Cassini’s chief engineer at JPL.

The mission faced other hurdles as well. Six years before launch, severe budget cuts stripped the spacecraft of its scan platform, a revolving arm that allows instruments to be pointed in any direction no matter which way the spacecraft is facing. In addition, the scope of many instruments had to be scaled back to meet new budgetary requirements.

Some mission scientists complained that the cost-cutting deprived them of valuable data. But most ultimately agreed that Cassini surpassed their expectations.

“Cassini had such great capability, and it was there for so long that you really could do everything,” Ingersoll said.

NASA engineers said Cassini’s instruments were still functioning at the time of its demise. The problem was that it had run out of propellant.

“If we were a car, the gas light would have come on years ago, and the needle is most definitely sitting on ‘E,’” said Todd Barber, Cassini's lead propulsion engineer at JPL.

Mission planners decided the spacecraft’s complete destruction was necessary to prevent it and any of its remaining radioactive plutonium from ever crashing into — and perhaps contaminating — Titan or Enceladus. (The same decision was made with Galileo, which was deliberately crashed into Jupiter to eliminate the risk of contaminating the moon Europa.)

If any plutonium were to survive a crash landing, its heat could melt a moon’s water ice. In addition, fragments of the spacecraft might carry spores from Earth. Mix them all together in a life-friendly environment, and “you’d have a nice little concoction to get things going,” said Hunter Waite, director of planetary mass spectrometry at Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio.

There is no fear of that happening on Saturn.

“In this case, everything will eventually be sucked into the interior of Saturn and reprocessed,” Waite said.

Although Cassini’s journey has come to an end, scientists say they have only begun to scratch the surface of all the observations it made.

“We’ve had this fire hose of data for 13 years, and we’ve only skimmed the cream off it,” Spilker said. “Researchers will be working on it for decades, and I’m sure there are new discoveries that we haven’t made yet.”

Proposals to return are already under consideration as part of NASA’s New Frontiers program, including a Saturn probe and separate missions to Titan and to Enceladus.

“Already, Saturn is beckoning us to go back,” said Jim Green director of planetary science at NASA.

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