The search for life: NASA to deploy robotic probe to Europa
NASA is planning to send a robotic lander to Jupiter's icy
moon Europa to explore if alien line is swimming in the gigantic saltwater
ocean locked beneath its frozen surface. In early 2016, NASA's Planetary
Science Division began a pre-Phase A study to assess the science value and
engineering design of a future Europa lander mission.
NASA routinely conducts such studies - known as Science
Definition Team (SDT) reports - long before the beginning of any mission to
gain an understanding of the challenges, feasibility and science value of the
potential mission. Since June last year, NASA has deliberated to define a
workable and worthy set of science objectives and measurements for the mission
concept, submitting a report to NASA on February 7.
The report lists three science goals for the mission. The
primary goal is to search for evidence of life on Europa. The other goals are
to assess the habitability of Europa by directly analysing material from the
surface, and to characterise the surface and subsurface to support future
robotic exploration of Europa and its ocean, NASA said. Scientists agree that the evidence is quite
strong that Europa, which is slightly smaller than Earth's moon, has a global
saltwater ocean beneath its icy crust.
This ocean has at least twice as much water as Earth's
oceans. While recent discoveries have shown that many bodies in the solar
system either have subsurface oceans now, or may have in the past, Europa is
one of only two places where the ocean is understood to be in contact with a
rocky seafloor (the other being Saturn's moon Enceladus). This rare
circumstance makes Europa one of the highest priority targets in the search for
present-day life beyond Earth, NASA said.
The SDT was tasked with developing a life-detection
strategy, a first for a NASA mission since the Mars Viking mission era more
than four decades ago. The report makes recommendations on the number and type
of science instruments that would be required to confirm if signs of life are
present in samples collected from the icy moon's surface.
The team also worked closely with engineers to design a
system capable of landing on a surface about which very little is known. Given
that Europa has no atmosphere, the team developed a concept that could deliver
its science payload to the icy surface without the benefit of technologies like
a heat shield or parachutes. The concept lander is separate from the
solar-powered Europa multiple flyby mission, now in development for launch in
the early 2020s. The spacecraft will arrive at Jupiter after a multi-year
journey, orbiting the gas giant every two weeks for a series of 45 close flybys
of Europa.
The multiple flyby mission will investigate Europa's
habitability by mapping its composition, determining the characteristics of the
ocean and ice shell, and increasing our understanding of its geology.
Post Comment
No comments
Post a Comment