
--Chris
Mission controllers say the tone from Huygens is still being received! The craft appears to have landed around 1245 or 1246 GMT (7:45 or 7:46 a.m. EST) on Titan and continues to operate from the moon's surface.
Huygens remains alive and sending its beeping signal from the surface -- more than an hour after controllers calculate it landed.
No, I assume it will take some time after the signal has been received. One ESA page puts the times for the first signals from Cassini at 17:15 CET/16:15 GMT, and first science data at 20:45 CET, with more data at 23:00 CET.Pierebean wrote:We can't wait to see pictures form titan. Do you know ,when will we see them?
does the esa have a TV in streaming ? the nasa does have one but i wasn't able to find esa's one.
Yes, they weren't even sure they would be able to detect it.andersa wrote:Is the signal simply too faint for any data to be extracted from it, while the carrier is detectable?
AFAIK this was never planned. It's just a way to quickly check that Huygens is/was alive.andersa wrote:I thought the idea was to use radio telescopes on Earth to try to pick up the faint Huygens data signal as a backup measure just in case the there were still problems with the Cassini relay operation
The Singing Badger wrote:This footage of anxious technicians twiddling their thumbs and trying to make smalltalk is strangely compelling!