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Galileo
[Note:
The following was published in substantially shorter form in
the September 8, 2003 New Yorker.]
September Song
[Requiem for a Space Probe] From
the point of view of the vintage Galileo Orbiter, which has
been tracing a complicated, cat’s-cradle trajectory
among the four largest moons of Jupiter for eight years now,
September 21st is bound to be an interesting day. If the
camera of the spindly craft hadn’t been left shuttered
after two hazardous close passes of the explosively volcanic
moon Io in late 2001 and early 2002, leaving the robot essentially
blind to visible light for the last two years, Galileo would
witness an ominous, impressive sight. The immense banded
bulk of Jupiter, by far the Solar System’s largest
planet, will balloon inexorably in front of the probe as
it hurtles closer than it ever has before to the Jovian atmosphere.
To the east, the “fire and ice” pairing of Io
and Europa, two of the most fascinating objects in the Solar
System, will traverse the rapidly spinning storm systems
at Jupiter’s day-night terminator in majestic sun-lit
tandem. On the other side of the planet, Ganymede and Callisto,
the outermost and larger of the “Galilean Moons” – objects
discovered by the spacecraft’s namesake, a certain
Pisan astronomer – will gradually near the Jovian horizon
and then set as the Orbiter’s speed takes it closer
and closer to their huge parent.
Within Galileo’s long rotating boom assembly, its
five Fields and Particles science instruments will all be
powered up; they’ve been conducting a live, real-time
transmission to Earth since February 28th. Only two parts
will be moving on the entire spacecraft: the upper, or “spun” part
of Galileo, which actually constitutes the majority of the
Orbiter, and which has been turning at about three revolutions
per minute for almost the full duration of its fourteen years
in space, and a tiny internal scanner motor in the craft’s
Energetic Particle Detector, which constantly shifts the
position of the detector within the instrument to allow it
to survey the entire sky.
Six million miles away in a direction indistinguishable
from that of the Sun, two links in the global chain of 70
meter wide deep-dish antennas that keep an Earthly ear tilted
towards such endeavors will track the signals from Galileo’s
science instruments and also its engineering data, including
the temperatures, pressures, and voltages of the various
spacecraft systems. As the probe crosses the orbit of the
boulder-like asteroidal moon Amalthea, the DSS-63 antenna
outside of Madrid may pulse a command, ordering Galileo to
collect and read-out data from its star tracker – a
device used to help orient the craft. This information will
be used to search for occultations of guide-stars, potential
evidence of a suspected rocky ring close to the planet. As
Madrid turntables eastwards, rotating over the horizon of
distant Earth, thin bars of ruby within the cryogenically
cooled receiver housed in multiple tanks of liquid nitrogen
at the focal point of one of NASA’s oldest tracking
stations, DSS-14 at Goldstone, California, will vibrate very
slightly as they pick up Galileo’s faint beacon, amplifying
the steady stream of information piping from the craft’s
science instruments as they convey information about the
intensely radioactive inner magnetosphere of Jupiter, as
well as the wispy, smoke-like “gossamer rings” weightlessly
suspended inside the orbit of tiny Amalthea. Traveling at
the speed of light, the spacecraft’s radio signal will
take 52 minutes to span the gulf between Jupiter and Earth.
Only two human artifacts have ever penetrated this close
to the planet before: Galileo’s own auxiliary atmospheric
probe, which plowed into Jupiter on arrival in December of
1995, and tiny Pioneer 11, the second outer Solar System
mission, which conducted an extremely close fly-by in December
of 1974 on its way to Saturn.
At 12:42 p.m. PDT Galileo will whip behind Jupiter as seen
from Earth, and all telemetry will abruptly cut off, eclipsed
by night-shrouded clouds. Seven minutes later and while traveling
at a speed of 48 kilometers per second relative to the Jovian
atmosphere, Galileo’s boxy, instrument-festooned octagonal
frame and the leading edges of its three extended, spinning
booms will start to glow red. Within 30 seconds they’ll
have snapped off, but will continue tumbling behind the now
white-hot main body of the hurtling craft. By the time the
Galileo Orbiter reaches the one-bar level of the atmosphere,
many of the 85,000 component parts of perhaps the most complex
interplanetary spacecraft ever build will have separated
from each other as well, though they’ll continue burning
into the atmosphere in a hail of disintegrating shrapnel.
When its remains reach a depth of about 500 kilometers below
Jupiter’s hydrogen cloud-tops, a region where the temperature
soars to 660 Celsius, all of the Orbiter’s aluminum
components will have melted, then vaporized. At a depth of
1,000 kilometers, its titanium parts will finally also melt,
then turn into vapor. Rendered into a soupy haze of dispersing
metal atoms, Galileo will have become an undifferentiated
part of Jupiter, with no clues left as to its Earthly origins,
its mission, or its original ungainly, inquisitive, insectoid
shape.
Considering that Jupiter is 71,500 kilometers in radius – big
enough to contain all the other planets and moons of the
Solar System with plenty of room to spare – Galileo
will barely have penetrated its outermost atmospheric layer.
Thus the most complex, tortured, but ultimately redeemed
mission in the annals of deep space exploration ends with
a commanded suicide.
* * * Actually,
it’s something of a miracle that the probe ever got
to Jupiter in the first place. Galileo’s ultimate trajectory
can be traced backwards, through a loopy series of linked,
ever-shifting elliptical orbits around Jupiter and among
its satellites, and then further back still, through the
outer and then inner Solar System, in a mesmerizingly cyclical
then circuitous odyssey filled with averted disasters and
big triumphs. Leading the latter is a single discovery: that
Jupiter's opaque, cue-ball smooth moon Europa almost certainly
has an immense liquid water ocean under its frozen surface
crust – a realization which in turn has led to a vociferous
scientific debate about the prospects for life there.
Although Jupiter’s glassine moon certainly wasn't
the only target of Galileo's cameras during its eclectic
fourteen years in space, the implications of the probe's
pictures of this weirdly fissured sphere – many of
which show icebergs that have apparently rafted into new
positions before being re-frozen into Europa’s granite-hard,
but apparently quite thin, global ice-cap – produced
a collective euphoria in the planetary sciences community
in the late 1990's. As Richard Terrile of the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory put it, “How often is an ocean discovered?
The last one was the Pacific, by Balboa, and that was five
hundred years ago.”
In the end, Galileo’s record reads like a litany of
firsts. It conducted more fly-bys of more planets and moons
than any other probe in the history of the genre (forty,
including repeated encounters). It was the first to swing
close by an asteroid; the first to discover a tiny moon orbiting
an asteroid, on its second foray into the asteroid belt;
the first to examine the third stone from the Sun, a.k.a.
Earth, on a classic fly-by trajectory; the first to discover
life on Earth (in an intriguing test experiment devised by
Carl Sagan); the first to orbit one of the immense outer
planets; the first directly to observe fire fountains erupting
from the surface of Jupiter’s moon Io; and the first
actually to fly through a plume from Io, a lurid yellow-orange
firecracker with an estimated 200-300 volcanoes erupting
across its pitted face at any one time (a finding itself
attributable to Galileo). In July of 1994, while still outbound,
Galileo provided long-distance direct observations as fragments
of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 slammed into Jupiter at radical
speeds, producing multiple fireballs that rose over the planet’s
limb – a series of frightening detonations more powerful
than the largest H-bombs and entirely invisible from Earth.
Another first, one of the first.
During the mission’s last years, when it was run by
a skeleton crew on a low budget and had taken more than four
times as much of the fierce Jovian radiation as it had been
designed to withstand, Galileo’s systems faltered frequently,
but it continued to come up with discoveries. In November
of last year, for example, its star trackers registered the
presence of up to nine tiny moons orbiting close to Jupiter.
In 2000, its on-board magnetometer came up with the strongest
evidence yet that a liquid water ocean exists – right
now; contemporaneously – under Europa’s ice.
Galileo even made a discovery outside the Solar System. In
June of 2000, its star tracker suddenly failed to recognize
the bright star cluster Delta Velorium, which flares brightly
(and, as it appears, unsteadily) in the southern-hemisphere
constellation Vela. Subsequent observations from Earth confirmed
that this grouping of stars – which have a greater
magnitude than the North Star, and which has been catalogued
and observed since ancient times – in fact contain
a dual-sun system, with one of its component parts periodically
eclipsing the other, resulting in the variable light output
that puzzled the spacecraft’s instrument.
Galileo thus became the first interplanetary probe ever
to make an interstellar discovery.
* * * Given this litany
of accomplishments, which outstrips that of any living human
astronomer, it may come as a surprise that this was also
the single most troubled mission in the history of robotic
space exploration. Its problems started well before launch,
and they didn’t end there. I’ve been keeping
an eye on Galileo for years, mostly out of sheer fascination
with its pictures of Europa and Io, many of which exceed
the most improbable visions of 20th century science fiction,
and during that time whenever I got a chance to meet some
of Galileo’s Earth-bound handlers, I took it. These
people have what amounts to the most fascinating desk job
of all time: they get to explore strange new worlds, and
boldly go where no one has gone before, all in symbiosis
with a two-ton spacecraft that’s six million miles
away.
In the spring of 2000 I met Bill O’Neil, a square-jawed,
silver-haired engineer who served as Galileo mission director
for the bulk of its main mission to and around Jupiter. O’Neil
described the turbulent ups and downs of the probe’s
ongoing journey with the ongoing muted euphoria – a
low-key exultation really – of someone who’d
actually done it: he’d brought it off, beating the
odds that had so mysteriously stacked up against the mission.
Although O’Neil has played a major role in almost
every American robotic space mission since the first Surveyor
touched down flawlessly on the surface of the Moon in 1966,
Galileo dominated his career. He worked on the project for
eighteen years—originally as the manager of its science
and mission design, then as project manager for the entirety
of its main mission to and around Jupiter. O’Neil described
Galileo’s sorry state as it endured a series of launch
delays around the time the Challenger shuttle exploded in
1986. Some were due to that tragedy, some not. Galileo’s
entire flight plan had to be redesigned an unprecedented
five times as the rocket power available to take it out of
Earth orbit diminished (for various reasons) and the configurations
of the planets shifted (for reasons easily explainable with
reference to Newton). The probe was repeatedly trucked back
and forth between California and Florida; it was disassembled,
cleaned, stored, and then re-assembled; hair turned gray
as the mission went from its late 70’s design to its
actual 1989 launch to its extremely attenuated Jupiter trajectory
and then finally on to a series of revelatory encounters
with the planet’s eye-opening satellites.
One of his stories in particular stuck in my mind. It involved
an obscure JPL trajectory specialist named Roger Diehl, who
had single-handedly saved the mission, which had been in
serious trouble even before it left the ground. Galileo’s
most critical pre-launch problem was that it was saddled
with a woefully underpowered solid-fuel upper stage booster
that could barely get it out of Earth orbit. This circumstance
had come about because after the Challenger disaster, a newly
(and as it now appears, temporarily) safety-conscious NASA
decided that Galileo’s more powerful Centaur upper
stage – which was liquid-fuelled and therefore more
dangerous than its weaker solid-fuelled alternate – couldn’t
be lofted along with the Shuttle’s human cargo. And
Galileo had been designed for Shuttle deployment.
The result was that, after nearly a decade of development,
testing and assembly, the spacecraft was on the verge of
a one-way trip to the Smithsonian. JPL responded by deploying
its best talent and kicking into high gear. Soon after the
Challenger explosion, mission design manager Bob Mitchell
assembled a cutting-edge team of trajectory specialists,
including Roger Diehl, Lou D’Amario, and Denis Burns.
Their mandate was to figure out how get what amounted to
a Mercedes Benz of a space-probe to Jupiter with a lawn mower
engine under the hood.
It was Diehl who ultimately came up with the exquisitely
unlikely trajectory actually capable of getting the mission
to its destination. Late in July, with the doomed robot riding
its last orbit in towards Jupiter, I called him at JPL. “Yeah,
Galileo,” he recalled ruefully. “You know, all
these deep space missions have their problems, but Galileo
really seemed to have more than its fair share. We used to
have a party every year, a ‘five years to launch’ party,
and then a ‘three years to launch’ party, and
what was funny is that each year the numbers of years would
jump around – you know, forwards, and then backwards.
Finally at one of the later parties we had a plot up that
showed exactly where we thought we had been at each party
over the years.” A disembodied laugh tumbled through
static.
I asked him what had led to his mission-saving epiphany,
and Diehl explained that the existing upper stage only had
enough juice to get Galileo to Mars or Venus – intriguing
Solar System objects to be sure, but not ones it had been
designed to study. So his first efforts were directed at
getting the spacecraft to Mars and then using that planet’s
gravity to sling it onwards to Jupiter. It turned out, however,
that as Galileo’s launch kept on getting postponed,
Mars had moved inexorably onwards from its ideal placement
in between Earth and Jupiter. Getting a boost from the Red
Planet was less and less of a usable proposition.
“So then the next thing that I recall was saying ‘Well,
let’s launch to Venus,’” Diehl said. I
pointed out that, apart from that planet being in an entirely
counter-intuitive direction – Venus is in the inner
Solar System; Jupiter’s a very great distance in the
opposite direction – Bill O’Neil had told me
that Galileo had never been designed to go inwards and closer
to the Sun before going outwards to the frigid space around
Jupiter. Hadn’t that presented a thermal problem? Yeah,
Diehl responded, but the mission was on the verge of cancellation
anyway, and his boss Bob Mitchell had said consider anything.
Even though the spacecraft’s designers might’ve
been appalled at the idea of heading towards the Sun rather
than away, given a workable trajectory, and perhaps with
some kind of heat shielding, that could sort itself out later.
“I remember I read that when a person gets pumped
up to really work a problem, the adrenaline flows,” he
said. “Its almost like you’re working at a level
that you haven’t worked at before. And I sort of experienced
something like that.” At this point even the tone of
Diehl’s voice had subtly changed – gradually
shifting to a higher pitch as his words came faster. “I
would go to bed at night, and my wife said she could even
hear me talking about trajectories in my sleep. And then
I’d wake up in the morning and I would have something
that I would immediately want to try.
“And so the night before I found the first trajectory
which identified the concept, I remember thinking ‘I’m
going to totally ignore Mars.’ In my previous trajectory
work I had done a lot of the initial tour designs for how
you fly by the different satellites of Jupiter. So I said
to myself ‘I’m going to think of the problem
as doing a tour of the planets of the Solar System with the
goal of getting to Jupiter.’ And I didn’t care
how many years it would take to do it.”
There was a pause at the other end of the line. “You
know, in the back of my mind I felt that there was something
out there, and why haven’t I found it, I know it’s
there,” Deihkl finally resumed. “And throwing
Mars out of the equation was like opening the flood-gates
to being able to find it. And the next morning I went in,
and within fifteen minutes I found it.”
His trajectory required that Galileo return from Venus and
swing past the Earth again not once but twice on its way
to Jupiter. After putting up some initial resistance, the
spacecraft’s designers soon came up with light-weight
thermal shielding to protect the spacecraft from the harsh
Venusian sun, and meanwhile Diehl’s colleague Lou D’Amario
went on to take the initial trajectory concept, quickly dubbed
VEEGA (“Venus Earth Earth Gravity Assist”), and
spent months improving it substantially, building in more
favorable Earth departure and Jupiter arrival times and incorporating
two asteroid fly-bys for good measure. Flight time from Earth
to Jupiter had gone from three to six years, but it seemed
a small price to pay – particularly given a resuscitated
mission and some worthy science objectives along the way.
I asked Diehl if he thought he had received the recognition
he deserved. “Well, the fact that Galileo ultimately
flew a trajectory that I came up with, that was the ultimate
high for me,” he answered slowly. “I mean, nothing
could replace that. But yeah, I was well known and at the
same time within the team I think it caused a little bit
of… well, a little bit of hard feelings. You know,
everyone was working equally hard, and I was getting a lot
of recognition. And at JPL you have a lot of people who are
very high achievers. So you know, in one way I felt very
good but at the same time there were these hard feelings.
So it was a little bit tempered by that.”
There was another ruminative pause. “But to this day
I’m still very proud, and my car license plate says ‘VEEGA,’” Diehl
concluded. “So every morning I go out and I see the
word.” A pleased chuckle floated across the line from
the air-conditioned blaze of noontime Pasadena.
* * *
Diehl’s brainstorm allowed Galileo
to be taken out of storage and reassembled in the womb-like
clean rooms of JPL, but the game wasn’t over, not by
a long shot – and we’re talking here about one
of the longest shots ever conceived and executed by the species.
By the time Galileo was actually deployed from the reactivated
Space Shuttle in 1989, seven years after its original launch
date, its on-board processors were six generations behind
what anyone with a couple thousand bucks could buy at the
local neighborhood PC store. (They were in fact radiation-hardened,
rebuilt versions of the RCA 1802 chip – the same processor
which ran the most primitive early video arcade game, “Pong.”)
And by the time Galileo’s underpowered upper stage
fired, sending the craft puttering towards Venus to pick
up momentum, one of its most important component parts, which
was originally manufactured in Florida, had already vibrated
its way across the full span of the continental United States
in the back of a truck four times.
Throughout the entire first part of the trip, the spacecraft’s
umbrella-shaped high gain antenna – intended to be
its main communications link to the Earth from way out at
Jupiter – had been snugly folded, exactly as an umbrella
generally is in the absence of rain, i.e., along a central
spine projecting from its center. The importance of this
particular device can’t be overestimated: Jupiter’s
so far from Earth that if you tried to drive your Ford Galaxie
there, it would take about 79 million years, floored. The
plan was to deploy Galileo’s vital main antenna only
in late 1991, after the probe had receded far enough from
the Sun, nineteen months after launch.
But first came “Earth-1” – the first Earth
fly-by, which happened to coincide with the first Gulf War,
to the point where JPL had to inform NORAD (the North American
Air Defense Command) that the hurtling blip that would appear
on their radar screens on December 8th – an incredibly
fast-moving object that might well appear to originate from
the Middle East, not Venus, and be on a ballistic trajectory
towards the continental United States, not the outer Solar
System – was actually a NASA-origin space probe, and
not one of those famous disappearing Iraqi “weapons
of mass destruction.”
“I’ll tell you, I can’t really explain
this,” O’Neil had said to me in Paris, “but
Earth-1 was the most euphoric professional event of my life.
Now why wouldn’t it have been arriving at Jupiter,
when everything worked perfectly?” Yeah, I wondered,
why not? We sat there together, baffled, until finally I
ventured a longish explanation: they were sitting there at
JPL on Earth, had finally managed to get their machine out
into the wine-dark etcetera, and there it was already coming
back to them, but only temporarily, and showing them themselves,
in fact all of us here on this marvelous blue-white sphere;
of course you were euphoric…
O’Neil cut me off in full improv. No, he said, the
still-furled high gain antenna meant there weren’t
any “real-time, gee-whiz images.” Instead Galileo
had been forced to rely on its small, stumpy, omnidirectional
low gain antenna for the entire first part of the cruise,
a device which had been put onboard only for near-Earth and
emergency communications purposes. Such a low-wattage antenna
didn’t allow for the rapid delivery of bandwidth-hogging
pictures. No, Bill O’Neil’s “Earth-1” euphoria
had most likely been because “everything seemed perfect.
We had been through all this, and in particular, we had been
to Venus, we had demonstrated that we had overcome the challenge
of taking a spacecraft that was never intended to go there,
there and back successfully – and the answer is, probably,
that it looked like all the challenges were handled. That
we had survived.”
* * * His
high lasted only another five months. With Galileo now heading
out towards the cooler climes of the Asteroid Belt, and in
fact towards the very first encounter between a robot and
an asteroid, the time had come for it to open its high gain
antenna and presumably begin pulsing the anticipated luxurious
flood of real-time, 134 kilobytes per second data towards
Earth. Galileo’s data rate was designed to give it
enough bandwidth to fire one picture home from Jupiter per
minute, while also feeding information from all its other
science instruments simultaneously. Its antenna, in fact,
was the largest ever to have been sent out of Earth orbit – so
large that it had to be folded even in the cavernous confines
of the Shuttle bay.
Perhaps not surprisingly, though certainly tragically, when
JPL finally ordered Galileo to open this key device – it
stuck. And subsequently refused to budge, no matter what
they tried to do. Later analysis determined that a design
flaw combined with the vibrations during all the trucking
across the country were largely responsible. It was Galileo’s
second potentially mission-terminating catastrophe, and it
was also a devastating blow to everyone’s morale.
JPL responded by deploying its best talent and kicking into
high gear. This was not the myopic Hubble Space Telescope,
which could be affixed with what amounted to a monocle by
visiting astronauts; Galileo was already nearing the orbit
of Mars. Within a week of the antenna failure, two engineering
teams were formed. One was dedicated to figuring out how
to get the thing unstuck (essentially through alternately
heating, then freezing, than heating the antenna by rolling
the spacecraft’s aft-end towards and away from the
Sun, then ordering the small antenna deployment motor to
pulse; then trying multiple variations of that over a period
of months while cursing through clenched teeth).
The other team was dedicated to figuring out how to make
the mission work without the use of the high gain antenna.
It was comprised primarily of telecommunications specialists
from JPL’s Deep Space Network, and was assembled under
the leadership of the head of research and development for
the network, Leslie Deutsch.
The Deep Space Network has been a central node of the Information
Age since well before it was called that – since the
short-lived Space Age, in fact. People who’ve developed
systems and procedures for the DSN have gone on to define
(and sometimes profit mightily from) the protocols and standards
and frequency modulations and complex decoders and other
gizmos that govern that alternative universe of routers,
chips, transmitters and receivers that are the backbone of
the Age. And the Deep Space Network has also frequently served
as what one of Deutsch’s predecessors called “a
million mile screwdriver” – the only way for
JPL to fix distant problematic robots, of which Galileo was
not the first nor the last, though certainly the most challenging.
One day after calling Roger Diehl, and with distant Galileo
already almost three million miles closer to its fatal rendezvous
with Jupiter, I picked up the phone again and dialed Leslie
Deutsch. I asked him what his first order of business was
when the sickening realization dawned that JPL’s billion
dollar flagship, now finally on its way after multiple delays,
was — metaphorically at least — dead in the water. “There
was a crises,” he acknowledged. “I got together
with a few people, and we did some brain-storming. And we
said suppose the high gain antenna never opens. Suppose it
never gets any better than this? What do you think we can
do? And we were doing that within a week of this event. We
worked pretty fast on it. And we did some thinking.
“And first we said, suppose we don’t change
anything, what’s the data rate going to be when we
get to Jupiter? If we just have to continue using this low
gain antenna? And if we had, we would have been a factor
of ten thousand lower in data rate than we had planned for
the mission. Instead of being a hundred thousand bits per
second we would have been at ten bits per second.” From
one picture a minute they had gone to one picture per month.
As Deutsch sketched out the disastrous scenario, I realized
that in effect, a kind of transmigration of souls was necessary.
The physical part of the spacecraft was out of reach – or
to the extent that it was in reach, the other team, the long-distance
antenna repairmen, were mandated to explore that side of
the problem. With the physical spacecraft largely unchangeable,
the extended hand of the DSN rescue squad could only have
its effect on Galileo’s information-processing side.
It could control, in other words, the bits that effect the
spacecraft’s atoms; the software. This was the ghost
in a machine named after a ghost, and it was changeable,
not through séances or crystal balls, but through
electromagnetic impulses pulsed through huge antennas.
But first the on-board computer had to be up to snuff, and
ready to receive the spirit that moves the body. “The
bad news was that these computer processors were ancient,” Deutsch
said. Because computer chips have to be entirely re-engineered
and re-built to withstand the vibrations of launch and the
harsh radiation levels of deep space, most deep space missions
are launched with computing power three generations older
than that available in the current generation of PCs. And
in the case of Galileo, Deutsch said, that lag had been compounded
by all the delays since its conception.
But the good news was that shortly before launch, the spacecraft
had been outfitted with twice as many memory chips as originally
intended. This would be the boon allowing the Deutsch team
to do something that had never been attempted before: to
change the spacecraft’s software – in effect,
its entire operating system – from the ground, painstakingly,
in mid-flight, using the sluggish low-gain antenna. And changing
the software would enable them to introduce advanced data-compression
techniques into the spacecraft, which in turn would help
to make it possible for Galileo to send useful pictures and
other science information over the low gain antenna from
as far away as Jupiter. Not nearly as fast as originally
planned, but still at a rate many times faster than the dismal
original estimate of 10 bits per second. The spacecraft would
now be able to send several hundred images to Earth per month.
Although Galileo’s instruments would now have to be
pointed with the greatest of care, and although some of its
science objectives would now have to be thrown out altogther,
the mission, it was beginning to seem, wasn’t a complete
write-off.
And there were other important elements to Deutsch’s
strategy. Millions of dollars would have to be invested in
adding to, and electronically ganging together, the network’s
globe-girdling chain of dish antennas – work which
would immediately benefit all other space missions. And the
antennas themselves would also be improved, with the cryogenically
cooled ruby receiver prongs at their hearts cooled down still
further – in practice by placing a freezer tank within
a freezer tank within a freezer tank, matrioshka doll style – to
help differentiate between the spurious noise of their surrounding
electronics and the distant zeros-and-ones whisper emanating
from Galileo’s impossibly (or rather, it was beginning
to seem, just possibly) weak and distant low gain antenna.
Perhaps inevitably, a type of low intensity warfare developed
almost immediately between the telecommunications specialists
that were endeavoring to figure out ways to continue the
mission without the use of the high gain antenna and the
engineers who were trying to open the damn thing from the
ground. “The very fact that we were sanctioned bothered
them, because it was like people saying they were going to
fail,” said Deutsch. “And yet on our team we
were always saying ‘You know, we’re doing all
this great theoretical work but we’d really love never
to have to put it into practice!’” He laughed. “The
conflict arose when we got to the point where we had to say ‘Look,
in the next six months we’ve got to make a decision
on this or there’s no time to do it the other way.’ And
so eventually we had to make that decision. And they were
basically told, ‘Ok, now you are the second class citizens,
and you have to fight for time on the spacecraft to try to
do what you want to do.’”
From there on out, occasional attempts were still made to
open the antenna, but they all failed. As for the intramural
conflict, it mostly took the form of glares between rival
encampments across the JPL cafeteria, but never escalated
to the food-fight stage.
* * * I had heard that
some of the cerebrations built into the software solutions
to Galileo’s high gain antenna problem had made their
way into daily use in the wider world, and was having a hard
time pinning down just which went where. So I asked Deutsch.
It turns out that two innovations in particular could be
traced directly to Galileo, with the first linked to the
crises itself and the second pre-dating the antenna problem.
When Galileo was launched, Deutsch said, it had a coding
technique built into its circuitry designed to reduce errors
in the spacecraft’s signals. “It’s called
a Reed-Solomon code, and was originally developed as a mathematical
curiosity,” he said. “Both Reed and Solomon were
consultants here. That particular code is what enabled the
CD industry, compact discs. It’s two levels of that
code that enable you to resist dust and scratches on a CD.
And that’s a multi-billion dollar a year industry.”
The CD industry is already in decline even before Galileo’s
terminal dive – but its decline has everything to do
with the second great innovation which saved the mission.
CD sales happen to be nose-diving because of the relative
ease of trading music for free on-line – and the other
concept devised by Deutsch’s team – the one necessitated
directly by the antenna malfunction – was the development
of a so-called “packet-based” information downlink.
It was soon to be the technique enabling efficient information
transfers on the Internet.
Previous to Galileo, and in fact initially on Galileo, a
spacecraft’s instruments fed an ongoing live stream
of telemetry to the ground – essentially an EKG reading
reporting on spacecraft health and accompanied by the science
results of various instruments. But there was a lot of wasted
space in that feed, the Deutsch group realized – “empty” bits
where a particular instrument was switched off, or simply
not vital at the moment, leaving holes or useless data in
a signal that was nevertheless transmitted to the ground.
Galileo could no longer afford that luxury, and so by the
time it got to Jupiter, the spacecraft’s instruments
were putting their information in packets, storing it, compressing
it, and sending it to Earth whenever time was available.
Although each packet now had to have a header specifying
when it had been recorded and from which instrument, the
added address bits were far fewer than the subtracted empty
or irrelevant ones.
The decades-long trajectory of this mission, in other words,
arches over the CD revolution, then the net-based MP-3 counter-revolution,
playing an integral part in both! At this stage I found myself
looking down at the tiny wheels spinning in the tape recorder
that was absorbing the distant words of Leslie Deutsch and
considering how impossibly retro, how positively archaic,
a 20th century Walkman, a device entirely without silver
discs or solid-state storage capacities, actually is in 2003 – when
suddenly I remembered the other key element that saved Galileo:
its on-board tape recorder.
* * * Yes,
Galileo has a tape recorder, much bigger than a Walkman,
a defiantly pre-digital box of mechanized wheels-and-springs
workmanship manufactured by the Odetex Corporation of California,
and practically indistinguishable from other, less radiation-shielded
reel-to-reel tape recorders attached to the higher-end stereo
systems of the sixties and seventies. If the jammed communications
dish was Galileo’s Achilles heel, its boxy archaic
tape recorder became its greatest single redeeming feature,
much to the surprise of everyone concerned. None of the wizardry
of the Deutsch Telecom team, revolutionary though it was,
would have amounted to a pile of Greek war helmets without
that vintage recorder – and yet the bulky device was
capable of making a “Pong”-era microchip seem
about as advanced as a solar-powered cell-phone.
The tape recorder had been incorporated into Galileo’s
design for one reason, and one only: to back up data from
the craft’s auxiliary atmospheric probe, which was
scheduled to tunnel into Jupiter’s clouds upon 1995
arrival, release its heat shield, deploy a parachute, and
go about the business of uplinking information about the
Jovian atmosphere as it sank into atomized oblivion. The
whole procedure was supposed to unfold over the course of
an hour, and was originally to happen in real time, with
a live link between the atmospheric probe’s seven instruments,
Galileo, and Earth. But if there were to be a technical problem – if,
for example, Galileo’s high gain antenna had failed
to deploy, or if the receiving station on Earth had just
been struck by thirteen bolts of lightening – then
that invaluable feed (another Galileo first: the first direct
contact between an outer planet and Earth-origin instruments)
would have been lost.
The solution was to back the probe data up on that tape
recorder, and the only reason why two such recorders hadn’t
been sent within the spacecraft’s bulky carapace – standard
operating procedure for a mission-critical component – was
that it was considered redundant to the Orbiter’s primary
task. But Galileo’s tape recorder became mission-critical
at the moment its JPL handlers, in evaluating their situation
sans main antenna, realized that it could be used – in
fact now had to be used – to store all the incoming
images and other scientific data gathered by the spacecraft’s
instruments during its multiple fly-bys of Jupiter’s
moons.
The complex kineticism of the Jovian archipelago meant that
on arrival, Galileo would necessarily have to go into a series
of elongated, months-long elliptical orbits between such
encounters. These delays, once thought of as necessary evils,
had now become much-needed windows during which the stored
fly-by pictures and other data could be fed from the recorder
to Galileo’s computers (for compression by its new
software) before being slowly trickled to Earth (over, you
guessed it, the low gain antenna).
So the filament of magnetic-tape spooled in Galileo’s
tape recorder became one of the thin threads on which the
mission’s destiny hung, and took its place within the
blinking gizmo-chain that was assembled to save the mission,
and by the time of the probe’s first encounter with
a Jovian moon, its entire operating system had indeed been
replaced. It was an unprecedentedly risky move, “a
complete brain transplant over a 400 million mile radio link,” as
one team paper put it, and any error could have meant losing
the spacecraft altogether. But it was utterly necessary.
Given that it extended out across half of the Solar System,
and consisted of a dialogue between human controllers and
an intricate, sophisticated, flawed machine, the whole assemblage
was a kind of fantastical Rube Goldberg contraption, one
held together by super-cooled ruby receiver prongs the length
of your pinkie, 70 meter wide dish antennas, pre-PC microchips,
and a reel-to-reel tape recorder that wouldn’t have
looked out of place in an “Eagles”-era recording
studio. It was also a remarkable illustration of the new
reach the human race has, via elongated digitized feeds and
pinwheeling hardware, across a Solar System it could once
only peer at with telescopes. And finally, it was a cobbled-together,
seat-of-the-pants series of fixes, workarounds, and software
patches in the great Jet Propulsion Laboratory tradition
of deploying the virtuosos, kicking into high gear, and figuring
out how to eke out a hardwired, long-distance living again.
Maybe literally so. As Deutsch pointed out, losing Galileo
could have meant losing interplanetary exploration altogether.
The ultimate footer of the bills, after all, is the public,
as represented by its sometimes zealously budget-cutting
representatives in Congress. And so the Galileo crises extended
well past the fate of a single mission, and could have become
a cancer in the whole tenuous enterprise of deep space exploration.
The stakes, in other words, were very high, but the million
mile screwdriver, it worked.
* * *
We rewind, in a blurred digitized shriek, past the stored
data of Galileo’s years of satellite touring, past
the successful deployment of its Jupiter atmospheric probe,
and to the mission’s second foray into the asteroid
belt, ten years ago last month. Enter Paul Geissler, planetary
scientist at the University of Arizona’s seriously
edgy Lunar and Planetary Sciences Lab.
I first met Geissler at the annual conclave of the American
Association of Astronomers’ Planetary Sciences Division,
which in October of ‘99 was held in the thermal baths
resort town of Abano Terme, just outside the walls of ancient
Padua – the city from which Galileo first observed
moons in orbit around Jupiter. He was part of a controversial
but well-respected team led by an original member of the
Galileo imaging team, Rick Greenberg. It included Randy Tufts
and Gregg Hoppa, the lead author of a paper to be delivered
at the conference. Their findings, based largely on some
innovative conceptualizing of fresh Galileo images, were
the first great widely accepted keystone in an effort to
establish the existence of a liquid water ocean on Europa.
I had come to meet Greenberg’s group because of their
Europa revelations, but now I was talking to Geissler about
Galileo’s second asteroidal encounter, which had brought
the first positive surprise from the mission in a long time.
“Way early on, back in ’92, I was given a project
to work on, and given lead authorship of that project,” he
said, stirring a perfect macchiato at the conference’s
outdoor café nexus, “and in 1995 we flew past
the second asteroid to ever have been looked at, and the
first one to have been looked at in high resolution, Ida.”Both
of the spacecraft’s asteroidal encounters had been
complicated by the keyhole strictures of its trickle-down
data rate, which were not yet ameliorated by the solutions
of Leslie Deutsch’s team. “It was wonderful,
we were locked into a room and sworn to silence,” Geissler
said. “Because we didn’t have a high gain antenna,
the data came in as what we call ‘jail-bars.’ Galileo
would send down a line, and then skip twenty lines, then
send down another line, and then skip twenty lines and send
down another line, and the issue was, is the asteroid in
the frame at all, and should we use our precious bits to
send down this frame or should we save it for the next frame?
“In one of these jail bars you could see Ida, and
then it dropped off back into space again, and then there
was another little “blip.” And that’s all
we had, Ok? And we were sitting in this room, we were locked
up together, you know, and were being threatened with ten
kinds of death if we made a peep about this until we had
better verification! These particular jail-bars had three
lines and then skipped a bunch, and this blip was in all
three of the lines, and we were dead certain that it wasn’t
a cosmic ray hit or anything like that. We knew there was
something there. But we waited until another instrument on
Galileo that happened to be looking in the same direction
at the same time had a confirmation of it, and that’s
when we announced it. But there were a wonderful few weeks
when we were confident of it, and we would sort of see each
other in the hall and whip out this picture, you know?”
That three-pixels-wide blip eventually materialized into
a punctuation mark of a moon; effectively a tiny object circling
a small object. Although asteroids had been suspected of
having moonlets before, this was the sheerest hypotheses-terminating
confirmation possible, and it was also a reassuring illustration
of what could still be achieved by Galileo even in its compromised
state. The moon was soon named “Dactyl” – Dactyls
being the pixyish magicians that, according to Greek legend,
live on Mount Ida in Crete. No more than a kilometer and
a half across, it resembled nothing so much as the small
sphere occupied by the similarly diminutive prince on the
cover of the most popular edition of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s
famous children’s tale. And its parent asteroid was
revealed to have an interestingly stratified, irregular topography.
Geissler, one of the leading image processors in the planetary
sciences community, has frequently been among the first to
get the results of Galileo’s photography. I asked him
how it felt to be the first person ever to “see” something
in deep space. “There was one thing that I was the
first human being to see,” he responded, “and
that I think was probably one of the most thrilling episodes
in my career. We had gotten two pictures of Ida up close,
from different perspectives. So as the spacecraft flew past
the asteroid it would snap a picture, at high resolution,
and then it flew a little bit farther and then snapped another
picture of the same region, again at high resolution.”
He soon realized that this separation allowed for the creation
of a stereo image of the kind which, when done properly,
can make an object leap into vivid, three-dimensional life. “So
I processed those pictures, and shot negatives of them, and
brought them home, that was late on a Friday. I had a darkroom
at home, and still on Friday night I made eight-by-tens of
these two, and I had pinched a stereoscope from work. And
late that night I popped in these two wonderful eight by
tens and saw a stereo image of an asteroid for the very first
time at high resolution!” He peered at me from under
raised eyebrows to make sure I understood how fundamentally
cool this was. “And that entire weekend anyone who
came close to my door was dragged over: ‘Look at this!’ You
know, the mailman, the babysitter… That was really
a thrill.”
* * *
If one had to choose a single piece of elegant inductive
reasoning to serve as the most compelling example of the
science findings resulting from Galileo’s Jupiter
mission, it would have to be Randy Tufts’s and Gregg
Hoppa’s untangling of the semantics of Europa’s
lines. Europa is the ice-clad moon that was discovered
to most likely have a sub-surface liquid water ocean, but
that discovery, to lift a line from The Sun Also Rises,
came in two ways: gradually and then suddenly. In a paper
delivered in Abano Terme, Hoppa’s hour-by-hour analysis
of the powerful shifting gravitational fields that play
across Europa during each of the moons’ Jupiter orbits,
teamed with geologist Tuft’s insights into tectonics
and faulting, yielded one of the most downright aesthetic
findings ever to come from space research. After a good
deal of excitement over Galileo’s photographs of
Europa’s rotated and then apparently re-frozen ice-bergs – provocative
images, clearly, but still deemed inconclusive – Tufts
and Hoppa were the “suddenly.”
Even before Galileo’s predecessor probes, the twin
Voyagers, zipped through the Jupiter system at approximately
the speed of a rifle bullet in 1979, scientists have known
that three of the four Galilean moons have high concentrations
of water ice. But only the hardiest optimists among them
dared to speculate that liquid water could exist all the
way out at Jupiter, more than half a billion clicks from
the Sun. Europa’s average surface temperature is estimated
at 100 degrees Kelvin, or about –260 degrees Fahrenheit.
The North Pole in February is a steam bath by comparison.
But despite the evidence of the thermometer, two stubbornly
contrarian clues surfaced in the Voyager photographic record.
The most obvious was Io, Jupiter’s innermost large
moon. Squeezed by the huge hand of its parent planet’s
gravity, yanked the other way by the shifting gravitational
fields of its three large Galilean sisters, Io produces seemingly
endless chains of active volcanoes. At 3,240 degrees Fahrenheit,
they are far hotter at their source than any on Earth. Io
is the most volcanic object in the Solar System; the mere
proximity of such an excitable object to Europa suddenly
rendered sub-surface liquid water more imaginable under its
ice. If such active volcanism was present on Io, why couldn’t
there be some erupting from Europa’s sea bed?
The other Voyager-era clue was very subtle and mysterious – a
faint whisper of potential meaning, albeit one discernable
from 124 million miles out, which is the closest either probe
got to Europa. (By contrast Galileo has veered to within
124 miles of the moon.) These were the long, looping chains
of scalloped cracks, each joined to the next in a kind of
cusp, that snake across large spans of Europa’s surface.
Looking oddly like telegraph wires slung in descending, then
ascending arcs – only in this case, arcs dwindling
in length with each span, as though the installers had progressively
run out of steam between poles – these “arcuate
cycloids” extend for hundreds of miles across the crystalline
topography encircling the moon’s poles. The largest
of these seemingly inscrutable features were already clearly
visible in the Voyager images, and Galileo had sent back
many more examples at a far higher resolution. They appeared
to be unique in the Solar System.
But scrutability’s in the eye of the beholder. Someone
once compared the situation of a poet to that of a person
standing in an open field, waiting to get struck by lightening.
If he’s lucky, he’ll get hit more than once in
a lifetime. Tufts’s role in cracking Europa’s
arcuate cycloids code was unambiguous: he was the guy who
got zapped.
A tall, free-ranging individual, intellectually and also
physically, Tufts had a kind of angular bony grace as he
walked – loped really – along the stone-cut walkways
of Abano Terme. It transpired that he had been struck by
lightening three times in his life. Before his formal training
as a planetary geologist, he had been an amateur spelunker.
In 1974, he and a friend stumbled on the recessed entrance
to a large, unexplored cave system buried beneath the Arizona
desert. They had managed to keep it a secret for an astonishing
fourteen years, until it could be protected from damage.
Arizona eventually invested 28 million dollars in the cave,
installing heavy weatherproof doors and a misting system
to keep the dry desert air out, and a month after I met Tufts
in Italy, they finally opened it with much fanfare as the
Kartchner Caverns State Park. “The whole idea is to
develop it so that it’s environmentally preserved,” Tufts
said. “I don’t know, it’s a paradox, but…”
Tufts’ second lightening strike had been his 1998
discovery of an immense fault line in the southern hemisphere
of Europa. The crack, which was subsequently named Astypalaea
Linea, and was revealed by Galileo photographs to be longer
than the San Andreas Fault, was important because it gave
clear evidence of something separating the Europan crust
from the rocky core of the moon – a clear indication
of a possible liquid water “decoupling” layer.
Still, it wasn’t yet the clincher.
It was the third lightening bolt – his arcuate lines
intuition – that we soon fell to talking about. Tufts
had been fascinated by those weird ridges even before Galileo
reached Jupiter in December of 1995. He recalled printing
out multiple copies of the less distinct Voyager pictures
of them and handing them out to his non-scientist friends,
the idea being to see if they might miraculously intuit the
cause. He even took the pictures to a glass-blowing factory
in downtown Tucson, and asked if they’d ever seen anything
like it. What did they say? I asked. “No!” Tufts
laughed, scratching the back of his balding head. “I
was just casting about for any kind of analogue, anything
that might do it.”
With the Astypalaea fault as his subject, Tufts was working
on his doctoral dissertation one night in the summer of 1998
when it occurred to him that one explanation for a slight
curvature in his fault-line could be the regular shift, in
both direction and amplitude, of Jupiter’s gravity
during each of Europa’s revolutions around the planet.
With its parent planet weighing in at over 300 times the
mass of Earth, immense gravitational stresses inevitably
play across Europa’s flexing ice shell. Tufts remembered
going into the lab in July to “play with” Gregg
Hoppa’s detailed maps of those stress fields, which
calculated their evolving orientation and changing force
levels. Squinting down at the print-outs while sketching
lines in a small notebook with a stub pencil, he felt a growing
excitement: when he followed Jupiter’s shifting influence
on the Europan surface, one hemisphere of which is always
facing the planet, he ended up with looping cracks that propagate
in curving, stop-and-go chains – exactly what they
really do.
I asked him why the cycloids do that – stop and go.
Tufts explained that Europa’s slightly elliptical
orbit meant that Jupiter’s gravity increases and
decreases with metronomic regularity; as a result, cracks
start propagating, but then as Europa recedes from Jupiter,
they stop again. By the time the stresses pick up again
an orbit later, they’re oriented in a different direction – one
closer to the starting direction of the previous link in
the chain, in fact. The procedure results in those bizarre
linking cusps where the cycloids suddenly make an about-face.
Finally and most intriguingly, the whole process couldn’t
happen without the existence of a large body of sub-surface
water to exert tidal pressure from below – something
which Gregg Hoppa had been the first to realize.
The whole idea ultimately has an almost sculptural simplicity,
and later I couldn’t help but thinking of Roger Diehl
and his VEEGA trajectory. It too, had somehow been waiting
for discovery, lost in plain sight among a tangle of alternate
trajectories; it too ultimately looked simple, the way a
triple pirouette by an ice dancer might look simple, though
it had presented itself as a solution only after much obsessive
work; and like Tufts’s cycloids, it too curved gracefully
through space and time, its arcs and reversals subject to
gravity’s uncompromising but explicable cable work.
And one revelation hinged irrevocably on the other; Tufts’s
Europa insight would’ve been impossible without Galileo
data, and Galileo wouldn’t have gotten near the moon
without Diehl’s VEEGA trajectory.
Tufts had tossed a two-decade career as a community organizer
to focus on Europa research, and it turns out he had one
overriding motivation beyond sheer scientific curiosity. “Because
I was interested in politics, I thought a lot about what
kinds of things would best promote world peace,” he
told me. “One of those, it always seemed to me, would
be to find life somewhere else. It would give us a vastly
new perspective on existence.” He laughed. “I
mean, on the one hand, it might take us down a peg, which
always could be useful. And the other thing it might teach
us is that life is what the Universe does. What is the Universe?
It might be a great mechanism for creating consciousness.” And
then he excused himself: he had a date with a working group
that was proposing instruments for what was to have been
Galileo’s successor, a Europa Orbiter. It was supposed
to have been launched this year, but the mission was cancelled
in 2002 for budgetary reasons.
In late April of that year an obituary appeared in The New
York Times. It gave an accurate account of two of the three
lightening strikes that had graced Randy Tufts’s life
in the 53 years before a rare bone marrow disorder suddenly
felled him: the Arizona cave discovery and that of Europa’s
600-mile long Astypalaea Linea fault. It didn’t, however,
say anything about the feat of deduction that had unraveled
Europa’s cycloidal ridges conundrum and become the
first great confirmation of a sub-surface liquid water ocean
there. Maybe this was because Gregg Hoppa was the lead author
of that paper, or maybe it was just because space constraints
precluded trying to explain the thing in an obituary. How,
after all, to put this story of pure logic – the logic
of natural forces in cyclical motion, but also the force
of the natural workings of the human brain, that mysterious
instrument capable of using robot visions to deduce the origins
of encrypted inscriptions on the face of a moon that’s
six million miles away – into a newsprint death notice?
It may have been the most wonderful revelation to have happened
to this science-minded poet of the field, and it may yet
prove to be a key finding on the way towards the discovery
of extraterrestrial life. But three strikes and you’re
out.
* * * The
obit, however, ended on a prescient note. Just as Tufts protected
his cave, his wife Ericha Scott is paraphrased as saying,
so he wanted to establish safeguards to protect whatever
life might exist on Europa from damage by spacecraft. And
that’s the leading rationale behind Galileo’s
death dive. Unlike NASA’s Mars landers, which are sterilized
before launch, Galileo may still harbor some of the microorganisms
which inevitably hitch a ride on our space robots. If left
in its orbit around Jupiter after running out of propellant,
there's a chance that it would eventually crash into Europa,
potentially seeding the moon with aliens from Earth. (The
spacecraft also carries potentially dangerous plutonium pellets
in its two power generators.)
In late July I called Arthur C. Clarke at his home in Sri
Lanka and asked him to comment on Galileo’s death sentence.
I was interested in his view of the planetary protection
reasons behind it. Clarke has had his periods of Europa fascination;
in fact he put a mysterious form of intelligence in the Europan
ocean in his sequels to 2001: A Space Odyssey. But instead
of steering me towards 2010: Odyssey Two he mentioned an
old short story of his, Before Eden, which was published
in 1956. “It’s all about the danger that we might
contaminate new worlds,” Clarke said. Later I found
the story, which describes a scouting expedition to Galileo’s
first fly-by destination, Venus. The expedition left behind
that archetypical human artifact, a bag of waste. The waste
ended up contaminating a strange Venusian life form they’d
discovered there, ending its evolution. I concluded that
Clarke probably endorsed NASA’s plan to destroy Galileo.
In January of 1997, shortly after Galileo had first eked
Earthwards its pictures of piecemeal ice floes in the Europan
ocean, Galileo project director Bill O’Neil and mission
science director Torrence Johnson had an audience at the
Vatican with the Pope. It was a scene the Roman Catholic
Church’s most famous heretic no doubt would’ve
appreciated: the scientists running the mission named after
him meeting with the very pontiff who had finally acknowledged
that the shrewd astronomer might’ve had a point after
all. Presented with robot Galileo’s photographs of
Jupiter’s excellent strange satellites, multilingual
John Paul III studied the branching, forking, curving cracks
that fissure Europa’s silvery surface and pondered
for a minute. Then he looked up. “Wow,” he
said.
Three years after that Vatican audience, and three hundred
and sixty after the first Galileo was dragged from Florence
to a nearby Inquisition courtroom, a mouthful of a committee – the
National Academy of Sciences' Space Studies Board's Committee
on Planetary and Lunar Exploration, or COMPLEX – delivered
itself of a verdict on his successor. Asked by NASA to study
the various options for ending the Galileo mission, it recommended
disposal of the craft either through a controlled trajectory
into Jupiter or into its presumably sterile volcanic moon
Io. They ruled out another option, that of slinging the probe
out of Jupiter orbit, because of “the very small, but
nonzero, chance of eventual impact with Earth." Galileo
would not be given the slightest chance to come home.
When I asked Leslie Deutsch what his reaction had been when
he’d heard of the decision, he said he was initially
angry, though he understood the rationale behind it.Over
the years, he admitted, he had become emotionally attached
to the distant robot emissary, adding that it was only the
second time that NASA had deliberately killed a functioning
spacecraft. When I asked Bill O’Neil the same question,
Galileo’s long-serving project manager – and
one of the key architects of the effort to save the mission – mulled
it over for a few days, then sent me an e-mail. Galileo’s
end end would bring a personal sense of satisfaction at what
had been achieved, he wrote. Still, he found it ironic “Galileo
Galilei only got house arrest by his sponsor the Roman Catholic
Church for discovering things they didn't want to be true,
whereas our Project Galileo gets a death sentence from NASA
for its greatest discovery – the prospect of life on
Europa."
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