It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Starting in late 2016, Cassini will zip between Saturn and its innermost ring a total of 22 times in a mission phase now known as the "Cassini Grand Finale," which will end in September 2017 when the probe intentionally dives into the gas giant's atmosphere.
Like the earlier Galileo probe, Cassini has plutonium fuel rods which upon implosion could create a powerful nuclear fission detonation on Saturn. Due to the 72 lbs of plutonium on Cassini, 50% more than the 48lbs on Galileo, and the less dense atmospheric pressures on Saturn which has only 30% of Jupiter's mass, Saturn is a better host for a runaway nuclear fusion process than Jupiter. If Saturn were to be ignited, it would create a gigantic pulse of hydrogen and other particles as up to 10% of its mass was cast off, and would eventually reach the Earth with possibly catastrophic consequences.
originally posted by: temujiin
Starting in late 2016, Cassini will zip between Saturn and its innermost ring a total of 22 times in a mission phase now known as the "Cassini Grand Finale," which will end in September 2017 when the probe intentionally dives into the gas giant's atmosphere.
Like the earlier Galileo probe, Cassini has plutonium fuel rods which upon implosion could create a powerful nuclear fission detonation on Saturn. Due to the 72 lbs of plutonium on Cassini, 50% more than the 48lbs on Galileo, and the less dense atmospheric pressures on Saturn which has only 30% of Jupiter's mass, Saturn is a better host for a runaway nuclear fusion process than Jupiter. If Saturn were to be ignited, it would create a gigantic pulse of hydrogen and other particles as up to 10% of its mass was cast off, and would eventually reach the Earth with possibly catastrophic consequences.
If this happened, what would be the impact on earth?
Now this is where the intrigue begins. Long before Galileo plummeted into Jupiter’s atmosphere, conspiracy theorists cited that NASA wanted to create an explosion within the body of the gas giant, thus igniting a chain reaction, creating a second sun (Jupiter is often called a ‘failed star’, although it has always been way too small to support nuclear reactions in its core). This was proven wrong on many counts, but there were three main reasons why this could not happen:
1.The design of the radioisotope thermoelectric generators (RTGs) supplying energy to the craft wouldn’t allow it.
2.The physics behind a nuclear explosion (nuclear fission) wouldn’t allow it.
3.The physics of how a star works (nuclear fusion) wouldn’t allow it.
originally posted by: Javik
If they're crashing the probe into the atmosphere, is it possible for it to enter the atmosphere without getting torn apart on entry? Would it get torn up as it gets closer? If it can theoretically do this, can the probe take pictures from inside the atmosphere of Saturn? I always thought it would be absolutely amazing to see real pictures from inside a gas giant.
originally posted by: Javik
If they're crashing the probe into the atmosphere, is it possible for it to enter the atmosphere without getting torn apart on entry? Would it get torn up as it gets closer? If it can theoretically do this, can the probe take pictures from inside the atmosphere of Saturn? I always thought it would be absolutely amazing to see real pictures from inside a gas giant.
originally posted by: Javik
If they're crashing the probe into the atmosphere, is it possible for it to enter the atmosphere without getting torn apart on entry? Would it get torn up as it gets closer? If it can theoretically do this, can the probe take pictures from inside the atmosphere of Saturn? I always thought it would be absolutely amazing to see real pictures from inside a gas giant.