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NASA, ESA Join On Jovian Moons Mission



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 22nd 09, 11:36 AM posted to sci.astro,alt.astronomy,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy
Bluuuue Rajah
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 299
Default NASA, ESA Join On Jovian Moons Mission


NASA, ESA Join On Jovian Moons Mission

http://snipurl.com/cf2kl [www_aviationweek_com]

Feb 18, 2009
Jefferson Morris

NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) have agreed to jointly pursue a
new outer planets mission that would send separate U.S. and European
spacecraft to visit the four largest moons of Jupiter circa 2026.

Meanwhile, the agencies also will work together on a less mature mission
concept for visiting Saturn's moons Titan and Enceladus, which would
include a NASA orbiter and an ESA lander and research balloon that would
descend to Titan's cloud-shrouded surface.

The two spacecraft of the Europa Jupiter System Mission would launch on
separate rockets from different locations in 2020, arriving at the
Jupiter system six years later. NASA's orbiter, currently dubbed Jupiter
Europa, would have an estimated wet mass of 5,000 kilograms (11,000
pounds), and would launch on an Atlas V. It would conduct four flybys of
the volcanically active Jovian moon Io and several of frozen Callisto
before settling into orbit around Europa.

Europa is of particular interest to scientists because its icy crust is
thought to conceal a subsurface ocean - the existence of which the
mission would finally verify. Some have hypothesized that such an ocean
could even harbor life.

The spacecraft will produce global maps of Europa detailing the moon's
topography, surface composition and subsurface makeup via ground-
penetrating radar, and will mark a significant leap beyond the Galileo
mission, which launched in 1989 and spent years studying Jupiter and its
moons before finally diving into the gas giant's atmosphere in 2003.

"It will be able to transmit a tremendous amount of data back to Earth -
something Galileo could not do because of its antenna problem," says
Curt Niebur, NASA's Outer Planets Flagship project scientist.

The information gathered also will help inform the design of a possible
future Europa lander. The much-coveted lander originally was part of
ESA's plans for a separate Europa mission, but has been dropped from
this joint effort.

The total mission cost for NASA's probe is estimated at $2.5 billion to
$3 billion, according to James Green, director of the Planetary Science
division at NASA headquarters in Washington.

Meanwhile, ESA's spacecraft, initially named Jupiter Ganymede, will
enter a "resonance" orbit between Ganymede and Callisto, Niebur says.
The cost to ESA is estimated at 850 million euros, or roughly $1
billion. Both spacecraft will spend nearly a year orbiting their
respective targets.

Bigger than the planet Mercury, Ganymede is the largest moon in the
solar system, and the only moon known to possess an internally generated
magnetic field. Like Europa, it also may feature a deep subsurface water
ocean.

"Everything we know about Ganymede has been done with six passes by
Galileo," Green says, while Callisto got eight passes. "So our
understanding of the icy moons - Ganymede, Callisto and Europa - will
[receive] a significant advance from this mission alone."

Neither NASA nor ESA have yet given either probe the formal go-ahead,
but Green says that even if ESA ultimately opts not to move forward with
its Jupiter probe, NASA's spacecraft could still be launched as a
standalone mission.

Although equally attractive from a scientific standpoint, the Titan
Saturn System Mission mission was prioritized below the Jupiter mission
simply because the mission concept is less mature. During the study
phase, concerns arose over the detailed engineering of the spacecraft,
including its propulsion system, trajectory and mass margins. The
margins for the Titan flight are slim enough that engineers still fear
the concept could outgrow its launch vehicle without further refinement.



  #2  
Old February 22nd 09, 07:07 PM posted to sci.astro,alt.astronomy,sci.space.history,sci.space.policy
BradGuth
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 21,544
Default NASA, ESA Join On Jovian Moons Mission

On Feb 22, 3:36*am, Bluuuue Rajah Bluuuuue@Rajah. wrote:
NASA, ESA Join On Jovian Moons Mission

http://snipurl.com/cf2kl*[www_aviationweek_com]

Feb 18, 2009
Jefferson Morris

NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) have agreed to jointly pursue a
new outer planets mission that would send separate U.S. and European
spacecraft to visit the four largest moons of Jupiter circa 2026.

Meanwhile, the agencies also will work together on a less mature mission
concept for visiting Saturn's moons Titan and Enceladus, which would
include a NASA orbiter and an ESA lander and research balloon that would
descend to Titan's cloud-shrouded surface.

The two spacecraft of the Europa Jupiter System Mission would launch on
separate rockets from different locations in 2020, arriving at the
Jupiter system six years later. NASA's orbiter, currently dubbed Jupiter
Europa, would have an estimated wet mass of 5,000 kilograms (11,000
pounds), and would launch on an Atlas V. It would conduct four flybys of
the volcanically active Jovian moon Io and several of frozen Callisto
before settling into orbit around Europa.

Europa is of particular interest to scientists because its icy crust is
thought to conceal a subsurface ocean - the existence of which the
mission would finally verify. Some have hypothesized that such an ocean
could even harbor life.

The spacecraft will produce global maps of Europa detailing the moon's
topography, surface composition and subsurface makeup via ground-
penetrating radar, and will mark a significant leap beyond the Galileo
mission, which launched in 1989 and spent years studying Jupiter and its
moons before finally diving into the gas giant's atmosphere in 2003.

"It will be able to transmit a tremendous amount of data back to Earth -
something Galileo could not do because of its antenna problem," says
Curt Niebur, NASA's Outer Planets Flagship project scientist.

The information gathered also will help inform the design of a possible
future Europa lander. The much-coveted lander originally was part of
ESA's plans for a separate Europa mission, but has been dropped from
this joint effort.

The total mission cost for NASA's probe is estimated at $2.5 billion to
$3 billion, according to James Green, director of the Planetary Science
division at NASA headquarters in Washington.

Meanwhile, ESA's spacecraft, initially named Jupiter Ganymede, will
enter a "resonance" orbit between Ganymede and Callisto, Niebur says.
The cost to ESA is estimated at 850 million euros, or roughly $1
billion. Both spacecraft will spend nearly a year orbiting their
respective targets.

Bigger than the planet Mercury, Ganymede is the largest moon in the
solar system, and the only moon known to possess an internally generated
magnetic field. Like Europa, it also may feature a deep subsurface water
ocean.

"Everything we know about Ganymede has been done with six passes by
Galileo," Green says, while Callisto got eight passes. "So our
understanding of the icy moons - Ganymede, Callisto and Europa - will
[receive] a significant advance from this mission alone."

Neither NASA nor ESA have yet given either probe the formal go-ahead,
but Green says that even if ESA ultimately opts not to move forward with
its Jupiter probe, NASA's spacecraft could still be launched as a
standalone mission.

Although equally attractive from a scientific standpoint, the Titan
Saturn System Mission mission was prioritized below the Jupiter mission
simply because the mission concept is less mature. During the study
phase, concerns arose over the detailed engineering of the spacecraft,
including its propulsion system, trajectory and mass margins. The
margins for the Titan flight are slim enough that engineers still fear
the concept could outgrow its launch vehicle without further refinement.


I take it that you and others of your kind think the public is still
flush with loot to spend, or is this another SEC Ponzi Madoff approved
investment?

Why not let India do those moons of Jupiter, at a tenth the cost of
what anything NASA could possibly accomplish?

~ BG
 




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