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March, 2004

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UFO Reports 2  
Written by Dreamland Interactive UFO  
Sunday, 21 March 2004

 

Huygens Probe Returns First Images of Titan's Surface
By Peter de Selding
Space News Staff Writer
 

 

DARMSTADT, Germany -- The first pictures revealing the surface of Saturn's moon, Titan, were shown from Europe's Huygens probe, showing what look like drainage channels on the surface of what until today has been a planet totally hidden from view. 

The image unveiling marked the end of a successful journey for the hardy Huygens probe and the culmination of 25 years of work by mission managers, scientists, engineers and supporters.

"The European Space Agency deserves a tremendous amount of credit," said NASA’s Al Diaz, NASA's associate administrator of the Science Mission Directorate, while appearing to hold back tears during one of many press briefings on the probes status today. "There will only be [one] first successful landing on Titan, and this was it."

Huygens' first image, taken from an altitude of 16 kilometers, has a ground resolution of about 40 meters, said Martin Tomasko, principal investigator for Huygens' Descent Imager/Spectral Radiometer (DISR). Tomasko said that Huygens research teams now have about 350 pictures to work with.  [Scroll to the bottom of this story to see raw image files of the Titan descent taken by Huygens. All images courtesy of ESA/NASA/University of Arizona.] 

 

The image appears to show ravines that could have been carved by the liquid hydrocarbons thought to cover much of Titan's surface. The ravines, stubby drainage-like channels, appeared to funnel toward what appeared to be a shoreline, researchers said during their initial reactions to the image.

"If it's not a sea, it appears to be a lake of tar-like material," said John Zarnecky, principal investigator for the Huygens' Surface Science Package, which is taking data from the surface of Titan.

Huygens was originally expected to send more than 700 pictures taken during its 2.5-hour descent to the Titan surface, but one of the two communications channels on the satellite apparently malfunctioned, cutting by about half the number of images received by NASA's orbiting Cassini satellite and relayed to mission control here.

Zarnecky said the 350 images taken by Huygens of Titan's surface were only about half the anticipated photographic harvest researchers were expecting.

 

Huygens was originally expected to send more than 700 pictures taken during its 2.5-hour descent to the Titan surface, but one of the two communications channels on the satellite apparently malfunctioned, cutting by about half the number of images received by NASA's orbiting Cassini satellite and relayed to mission control here.

Zarnecky said the 350 images taken by Huygens of Titan's surface were only about half the anticipated photographic harvest researchers were expecting.

 

Zarnecky said the 350 images taken by Huygens of Titan's surface were only about half the anticipated photographic harvest researchers were expecting.

 

 

 

Resounding success

Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. 

Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. 

Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. 

Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. 

"You have enough information in this one photo to produce several scientific papers," Huygens mission manager Jean-Pierre Lebreton said. Titan's thick atmosphere has hidden its surface from view from passing satellites. "Today we are discovering a new world," ESA Director-General Jean-Jacques Dordain said. During a previous interview with SPACE.com, Tomasko said that finding a new understanding of Titan's surface was one of the fundamental goals of his team's DISR instrument."We hope to ultimately get 20 panaromic images," Tomasko said then via telephone, adding that during its parachute descent, the DISR camera had a resolution akin to that of the human eye.

 

 

Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. 

Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. 

Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. 

Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. 

"You have enough information in this one photo to produce several scientific papers," Huygens mission manager Jean-Pierre Lebreton said. Titan's thick atmosphere has hidden its surface from view from passing satellites. "Today we are discovering a new world," ESA Director-General Jean-Jacques Dordain said. During a previous interview with SPACE.com, Tomasko said that finding a new understanding of Titan's surface was one of the fundamental goals of his team's DISR instrument."We hope to ultimately get 20 panaromic images," Tomasko said then via telephone, adding that during its parachute descent, the DISR camera had a resolution akin to that of the human eye.

 

 

 

Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. "You have enough information in this one photo to produce several scientific papers," Huygens mission manager Jean-Pierre Lebreton said. Titan's thick atmosphere has hidden its surface from view from passing satellites. "Today we are discovering a new world," ESA Director-General Jean-Jacques Dordain said. During a previous interview with SPACE.com, Tomasko said that finding a new understanding of Titan's surface was one of the fundamental goals of his team's DISR instrument."We hope to ultimately get 20 panaromic images," Tomasko said then via telephone, adding that during its parachute descent, the DISR camera had a resolution akin to that of the human eye.

 

 

 

Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved. "You have enough information in this one photo to produce several scientific papers," Huygens mission manager Jean-Pierre Lebreton said. Titan's thick atmosphere has hidden its surface from view from passing satellites. "Today we are discovering a new world," ESA Director-General Jean-Jacques Dordain said. During a previous interview with SPACE.com, Tomasko said that finding a new understanding of Titan's surface was one of the fundamental goals of his team's DISR instrument."We hope to ultimately get 20 panaromic images," Tomasko said then via telephone, adding that during its parachute descent, the DISR camera had a resolution akin to that of the human eye.

 

 

"You have enough information in this one photo to produce several scientific papers," Huygens mission manager Jean-Pierre Lebreton said. Titan's thick atmosphere has hidden its surface from view from passing satellites. "Today we are discovering a new world," ESA Director-General Jean-Jacques Dordain said. During a previous interview with SPACE.com, Tomasko said that finding a new understanding of Titan's surface was one of the fundamental goals of his team's DISR instrument."We hope to ultimately get 20 panaromic images," Tomasko said then via telephone, adding that during its parachute descent, the DISR camera had a resolution akin to that of the human eye.

A teary landing

 

 


  An early image of Titan as captured by Huygens. Credit: NASA/ESA

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

There was much celebration at Huygens mission control here when the successfully landed on Titan between 1345-1346 local time here (CET), which was about 7:45-7:46 a.m. EST. 

But there was even more jubilation at 11:19 a.m. EST, when confirmation that Huygens had relayed quality data home.

"We have it? We have it!" said one mission team member before the mission control room erupted with applause and triumphant shouts

Communications signals took just over an hour to traverse the vast distances between Titan and Earth. 

 

 

U.S. and European officials had trouble holding back tears and cheers as they learned, after long minutes of tense staring into computer screens at mission control center here, that data from the descent was finally reaching Earth.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

"We have a scientific success,'' Dordain said in a press briefing. "We will now be able to start breaking Titan's secrets."

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Earlier in the day, Dordain and other ESA officials were touting Huygens as a marvel of human engineering for its spot-on landing and near-clockwork descent toward Titan.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Originally expected to send perhaps 2.5 hours worth of data to the NASA's Cassini orbiter for later delivery to Earth, Huygens was still sending signals five hours after activation, and researchers said the probe's robust battery could last up to seven hours total.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Huygens has also been sending limited data directly to Earth, where it has been picked up by a network of telescopes. The detailed data about what it found on its way through Titan's thick atmosphere has been sent to NASA's Cassini orbiter overhead.


 Titan seen from 8 km up by Huygens. Credit: NASA/ESA

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The communications channel glitch has the only Huygens hiccup that mission managers have reported. While the redundant transmission channel is not working properly, only one of the probe's six instruments - a Doppler tool to study Titan's winds - is dependent solely on that channel and may be compensated for by data from ground-based observations, mission scientists said.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NASA's Cassini orbiter has also sent an initial data set of its own to ground teams. It will be several hours more before scientists decipher this information. But the mission has already cleared several of its biggest hurdles and ha s demonstrated enough to be declared a major event in the history of space science.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

"This is a historic event," ESA Science Director David Southwood said. "The torch has now been passed from the engineers who delivered the probe and got the data sent to Cassini to the scientists who will evaluate the data."

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Choking back tears, Diaz, who worked on the Cassini-Huygens mission for years before taking up his current post, said "It's up to ESA to take this data and turn it into science."

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Diaz and Dordain embraced after they learned that Huygens' initial data was received by Cassini and ground telescopes confirming the initial success of the mission.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Officials said Cassini would continue to send its data packets in the coming hours. It is this data that will disclose details of what Huygens saw on its two-hour descent.

 

 

UFO Reports 3  
Written by Dreamland Interactive UFO  
Sunday, 21 March 2004

CYLINDRICAL UFO SEEN IN UNION HILL, NORTH CAROLINA

On Friday, November 5, 2004, at 4:45 p.m., eyewitness Robert C. "stopped by my sister's house" in Union Hill, North Carolina "to bring some cat food. While we were standing on her front porch, talking, I heard the sound of a small plane engine nearby, and I looked to see what kind it was. The sky that day was crystal clear, the weather cool, the temperature in the low 50s, with a 10-mile-per- hour breeze from the west-northwest."

"When I looked up and to the southwest, I saw what appeared to be a star. Totally motionless. What was striking about it was that it was still daylight, and there wasn't a cloud in the sky. The object had a nimbus around it like the halo that you see around a full moon in winter."

"I pointed it out to my sister, who said, 'Well, maybe it's a star.' The sun was still above the horizon, so I know it wasn't a star. I watched it for approximately one minute, and then the nimbus started to fade."

"There were power lines in front of her house, and I was using them to judge whether the object was moving. It began to turn slowly towards the south, and I could see that it was a metallic cylinder, no protuberances, dull in appearance as it didn't reflect the sun. It faded away in the south to the southwest in approximately one minute and 30 seconds."

"I had a couple of other errands to run, so by the time I started home, it was full dark. I live in a rural area, and I was traveling one of the back roads where there aren't a lot of houses. To my right, at treetop level, I saw a blue flash" at 5:52 p.m.

"I thought maybe I had seen a night light from a house hidden in the woods. I traveled for another three- quarters of a mile and saw it again. The road winds around so I couldn't be sure of the direction I was looking at. When I came around a turn, the woods opened back from the road a little, and I observed a neon blue orb crossing the road (I went back later and found the direction to be from west to east--R.C.) at treetop level and at about the speed of a small plane coming in for a landing (About stall speed, I'd guess--R.C.) It was about the size of a dime at arm's length, and I saw it for about three seconds before I lost it in the trees."

"When I got home at 6:13 p.m., I pulled my truck under the carport. As I was walking behind it, I looked to the east, and, just north of east, I saw a star that I thought was unusual. I've been an avid sky and aviation watcher since I was a child, and they just didn't look right. It appeared to be a star but it was 'shimmering.'"

"At first I dismissed it as an atmospheric distortion, and I started to go into the house, but something didn't seem right. So I went into the house and got my binoculars."

"As I watched the object, a small private plane came from the south, traveled behind the object (navigation lights occluded the object--R.C.), pretty much shooting down the star theory. The object appeared to be a cylinder with blue lights on the right, red lights on the left. I couldn't tell if its pulsating appearance came from rapid rotation or if it was multi-faceted and blinking. But even at a distance, it was quite beautiful. I went back into the house a couple of times as it was so cold and windy out."

"The third time I came out, the object was quite different in appearance. It was changing magnitude (dimmer and brighter--R.C.) and had turned a deep red color. Then it went back to its first (dull silver) coloration. I went back inside, and when I came out, it was gone."

"I was looking northeast in the general direction of (the constellation) Cassiopeia when a bright flash occurred at 6:33 p.m., and it was much like a lightning strike close by. But unlike lightning, it was in a small section of the sky (two inches at arm's length--R.C.) The only thing I could see, for lack of a better term, was a plasma cloud. It was pale but distinctive and looked like an elongated disk, kind of like looking at a spiral nebula edge-on. It disappeared almost immediately. (Email Form Report)

 

 

UFO Reports 4  
Written by Dreamland Interactive UFO  
Sunday, 21 March 2004

TWO UFOs SIGHTED IN FORT WORTH, TEXAS

On Friday, October 29, 2004, during the evening, Janet Richey was driving on Eighth Street, near Interstate Highways I-30 and I-35W, in Fort Worth, Texas (population 534,694) when "two big lights that were not blinking or moving appeared."

"The bright light on the left moved down in line with the second light," Janet reported, "The second light on the right then blinked like a strobe light, then disappeared."

"The other light moved along with my car as I turned south and west," past the Greyhound Trailways bus depot and the Terrant County Convention Center. "The object was outside my left window. As I turned toward the right, the object accelerated and moved from the back left of my window to the front left. It seemed like it was following me."

"I parked my car and watched the light. It did not move. I got out of my car and walked behind a building toward my work facility. When I came out from behind the building on the other side, the object was gone."

"The objects were bright lights. They did not have any blinking lights. They were not planets. I know what Venus looks like, and it was not Venus. They were too bright and clear. The objects were not airplanes because they could remain still and then accelerate quickly. Their shape is unknown--they were too bright to tell." (Email Form Report)

 

 

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