Planetary Science Update & Perspectives on Venus Exploration

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Planetary Science Update & Perspectives on Venus Exploration Presentation at VEXAG James L. Green Director, Planetary Science Division

Outline FY09 Presidents Budget Venus exploration opportunities: Plans for next New Frontiers Plans for next Discovery Plans for SALMON R&A opportunities

BUDGET BY SCIENCE THEME

Planetary Division

Planetary Division

What Changed, What s the Same What Changed: Initiated an Outer Planets Flagship (OPF) study activity joint with ESA/JAXA. Lunar Science Research augmented to include a series of small lunar spacecraft. Augments and enhances R&A to return more results from Planetary missions. Discovery Program: Includes the recently selected MoOs (EPOXI and Stardust-NExT), a Aspera-3 2nd extension (ESA/Mars Express), and selected GRAIL. Preserves critical ISP work FY08 thru FY10, but deletes outyear activities in favor of mor R&A and RPS enhancements. Completes the Advanced Stirling RPS development and prepares for flight demonstratio Mars Scout 2011 delayed to 2013 due to conflict of interest discovered during proposal evaluation. Direction to the Mars Program to study Mars Sample Return (MSR) as a next decade go Expands US participation on the ESA/ExoMars mission by funding the potential selectio BOTH candidate U.S. instruments and EDL support. What s the Same: Discovery Program: MESSENGER, Dawn, Mars Express/Aspera-3, Chandraayn/MMM New Frontiers Program: Juno and New Horizons Mars Program: Odyssey, MER, MRO, Phoenix, MSL Research Program: Lunar Science, PDS, ESA/Rosetta, JAXA/Hayabusa

New Frontiers & Discovery SALMON & ROSES

Just Released NRC NOSSE Report Opening New Frontiers in Space: Choices for the New Frontiers AO - NASA should: R1: Emphasize science objectives R2: Expand the list of candidate missions R3: Limit to the list below unless compelling science Complete NF target list in alphabetic order: Asteroid Rover/Sample Return* Comet Surface Sample Return Ganymede Observer* Io Observer* Jupiter Polar Orbiter with Probes - Juno Kuiper Belt/Pluto -> New Horizons Lunar South Pole Aitken Basin Sample Return Network Science* Trojan/Centaur Reconnaissance* Venus In-Situ Explorer

Current NF AO Status NRC s recommendations lists new targets to be considered All missions proposed must fit NF3 mission cost, timescale, and launch vehicle constraints Proposed missions must also be consistent with th unavailability of radioisotope power sources Launch Vehicle in or out of cost cap NF3 Schedule: Draft in September 2008 AO in December 2008 Expect NF3 AO to be greatly simplified PI experience requirements have been posted Final decisions for these elements have been mad Dr. Weiler and should be posted shortly

Discovery Program Mars evolution: Mars Pathfinder (1996-1997) Lunar formation: Lunar Prospector (1998-1999) NEO charact NEAR (1996 Solar wind sampling: Genesis (2001-2004) Comet diversity: CONTOUR Nature of du Stardust (19 Lost Aug 15 2002 Comet internal structure: Deep Impact (2005-2006) Mercury environment: MESSENGER (2004-2012) Main-belt asteroids: Dawn (2007-2015) Lunar Inter GRAI

Next Discovery AO Expected release in FY09 Contents to be determined: Cost Cap Launch Vehicle in or out of cost cap Use of Stirling Radioisotope Power Syst as GFE Final approval for these elements are with Weiler

Advanced Stirling Radioisotope Generator Engineering Unit peration in space and on urface of atmosphereearing planets and moons haracteristics:!14 year lifetime Nominal power : 140 We Mass ~ 20 kg System efficiency: ~ 30 % 2 GPHS ( Pu 238 Bricks ) modules Uses 0.8 kg Pu 238 inal wiring and connections or ASRG engineering unit nderway eliability to be demonstrated Lockheed Paired with in sleeve

Discovery & Mars Scout Capability Enhancement NRA Program solicited mission concept proposals for small planetary missions that require the ASRG power source Two Stirling Engines ~140 Watts each (as GFE Intended to foster science exploration in planetary science by missions enabled by ASRG Mission design assistance for these 6 month miss concept studies will be offered by NASA Selected 9 proposals 40 proposals submitted with average budget of $271K NRA directed proposers to budget $200,000-$300,000

DSMCE Selections es, Kevin JPL Venus Aerial Vehicle Polar VALOR: The Feasibility of A Nuclear Duration Balloon Mission to Explore the Po ic, Richard Los Alamos National Laboratory Moon Lander Locating and Characterizing Lunar Polar V of a Discovery-Class Mission ff, Bradley Washington University Moon Rover Journey to the land of Eternal Darkness an Lunar Polar Volatile Explorer in, Andrew Applied Physics Lab Asteroid Lander Ilion: An ASRG-Enabled Trojan Asteroid M ht, Michael JPL Mars Lander A tour through Martian history: An ASRG-p borehole. an, Ellen Proxemy Research Outer Planets Lander Titan Mare Explorer (TiME) wen, Alfred University of Arizona Outer Planets Orbiter Mission Concept: Io Volcano Observer (IV dford, Scott NASA/AMES Comet Sample Return Concept Study for a Comet Coma Rendezv Return Mission shine, Jessica Univeristy of Maryland Comet Lander Comet Hopper

Current SALMON AO Schedule SALMON Solicitation Development Sept 2007 Feb Release Draft for comment March 2008 Revise SALMON based on comments April 2008 SALMON Release Program Element Cycle I May 2008 Proposals Due August 2008 Selections Announced NLT February 20 SALMON Amendments (notional) Program Element Cycle II (special) May 2008 Program Element Cycle III (regular) May 2009 Final approval for the release of this AO has been ma Dr. Weiler expect an announcement soon

Types of Missions of Opportunity Traditional MoOs Investigations involving participation in non-nasa space miss (ie: science instrument, technology demonstrations, hardware components ) U.S. Participating Investigator Co-Investigator (non-hardware) for a science or technology experiment to be built and flown by an agency other than NAS New Science Missions using Existing Spacecraft Investigations that propose a new scientific use of existing NA spacecraft (ie: NExT, EPOXI ) Small Complete Missions Science investigations that can be realized within the specifie cap (includes all phases from access to space through data publication) Focused Opportunities Investigations that address a specific, NASA-identified flight

PSD R&A Opportunities ROSES 2008: Discovery Data Analysis Program (DDAP) -> Planetary Mission Data Analysis Program (PMD Participating Scientist Program for Venus Climate Orbit is under discussion A comparative Climatology of Venus-Earth-M is under consideration for ROSES 2009

NASA s

Outer Planets Flagship

Cassini Mission Prime mission July 2004 July 2008 Cassini spacecraft virtually 100% operational Approved extended mission goes to Sept. 2010 Extended mission science goals include: Titan (26 encounters) Enceladus (7 encounters + Rhea, Dione) Observe Saturn system thru Aug. 09 equinox Estimate ~46% of hydrazine will remains at end of the extended mission Depending on health an XXM is viable Important for end of life to retain adequate fuel Cassini costs: LLC to end of prime mission: $3.27B ($2.6B US, $660M ESA) Yearly operations: $80M The extended includes 2 ~ 2 thru Encela Prime obse curve

Flagship Mission Studies Europa Jupiter System

Background Phase I - January 2007 four studies initiate Europa Explorer - Led by JPL Jupiter System Observer - Led by JPL Titan - Led by APL Enceladus - Led by GSFC Final study reports submitted August 29th t Science Panel & NASA Technical Manage and Cost (TMC) Review Teams Dec. 23, 2007 NASA announced the Phase studies: NASA leads: Europa Explorer & Titan

Background (cont.) Phase II studies to concentrate on the findi from Science & TMC panels Other Programmatic changes include: Focused missions (not like Cassini, Galileo) Europa Jupiter System Mission (EJSM) consisting of NA Europa Orbiter, ESA Jupiter Planetary Orbiter, JAXA Magnetospheric Orbiter Titan Saturn System Mission (TSSM) consisting of NASA Orbiter, ESA insitu vehicles (lander & balloon) NASA cost cap ($2.1B FY07), MMRTGs only, 34m DSN

Schedule & Next Steps August 4-Sept. 12: Independent review of reports by Science and TMC panels Sept. 12 - Oct. 22: Teams respond to findin Oct. 22: Updated Phase II report due Nov.- Dec.: Final down-select to a single mission by NASA & ESA Mission must be above the floor of Planetary Decadal level science Technical feasible (ex: low or medium/low) with budget NASA and ESA jointly study one Phase A mission, establish consistent schedule