Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Europe Plans Its Next Large Missions



Last spring, the European Space Agency (ESA) put out a call for concepts for its next two €1 billion science missions.  If history proves to be a guide, there’s a good chance that one of the selected concepts will be a solar system mission.  ESA’s managers will announce their selection this coming November.

These large European missions are particularly important because they have the resources both to reach targets throughout the solar system and to carry enough instruments to conduct wide ranging studies once there.  If one of the solar system concepts is selected, we may get our first orbiter for Uranus, a return to Titan, or an orbiter and balloon for Venus.   The range of concepts proposed shows that planetary exploration continues to have a wealth of possible missions.

However, don’t hold your breath.  ESA believes in long term planning and the launches of the selected missions are planned for 2028 and 2034.  Add in ten to sixteen years for, say, a flight to Uranus, and you may be looking at first science return in the 2040s or 2050s.  (Actuarial tables suggest I won’t be around then, so for purely selfish reasons, I like the concepts with much shorter flight times, like those to Venus.)



ESA breaks its science missions into three classes: Large (~€1B or $1.2B), medium (~€400M or $480M), and small (for which I couldn’t find a price target).  For comparison, NASA also has three classes of missions: Discovery ($425M likely to become $500M), New Frontiers ($750M likely to become $1B), and Flagship (>$2B for the last three Flagship missions). 

ESA and NASA account for mission costs differently, making direct currency conversion comparisons difficult.  For example, ESA includes the launch but not the instruments or much of the data analysis (which are paid for by its member states separately).  NASA does the opposite.  As a rough guide, I assume a Large ESA mission buys somewhere between the equivalents of up to $1.5B in terms of how NASA implements missions.  That mission cost target nicely fits between NASA’s New Frontiers and Flagship mission classes.  (ESA also conducts some planetary missions out of different accounts, such as the two ExoMars missions planned for 2016 and 2018.) 

Previously selected ESA Large missions (at one time called Cornerstone missions) show what can be done within the ESA budget.  The Rosetta mission will conduct humanity’s first rendezvous and landing on a comet.  The BepiColombo mission will be the equivalent of the Cassini mission to Mercury with a far more capable instrument suite than the Discovery-program MESSANGER currently at that planet.  The JUICE mission will carry out extensive studies of Jupiter, flybys of Europa and Callisto, and will orbit Ganymede.

ESA’s budget allows it to fly three Large missions every 20 years.  In the past, ESA has balanced its large missions between astronomy/astrophysics and planetary missions.  The first mission selection for the upcoming 20 year period, JUICE, is a solar system mission to launch in 2020.   A second solar system mission in a row for the 2028 slot seems to me unlikely.  A solar system mission for the 2034 mission seems likely, but ESA could pick a second astronomy mission in a row and restore the balance in the following 20 year period.  I’ve looked through the astronomy/astrophysics concepts, and they are stiff competition for the solar system concepts.

So no guarantees, but the list of solar system mission concepts is exciting, and I’m hopeful for one of the two slots going one of them.  I’ve listed the mission concepts in order from the sun.  None of the proposed concepts returns to the target of a previous ESA large mission.  One though, returns to Mars where ESA will send its two ExoMars missions and two would return to Titan where the joint NASA/ESA Cassini/Huygens mission is conducted a descent and landing and continues to make frequent flybys.

How may ESA decide among what are a number of exciting proposals?  My guess is that three criteria will be used.  First, would the mission fundamentally enrich our understanding of an important world or class of objects?  Second, would a broad spectrum of the European planetary science community be involved?  Third, would the mission be feasible within the budget target and with technology likely to be available?

A mission to Uranus, for example, would greatly deepen our understanding the ice giant worlds.  By studying the atmosphere, magnetosphere, and moons, it would involve a wide range of planetary science disciplines.  However, a Uranus mission would need a radioactive power supply to produce electric power for the spacecraft.  U.S. law prevents supplying plutonium 238 to other nations (and the supply is already critically low).   ESA has proposed developing power supplies based on another radioactive element, americium, but that would represent a bet on an unproven technology.

As you read through the list of proposals below, you might ask yourself how you would rank each according to these three criteria.  If you decide to read the original mission concept proposals (130MB download), be prepared for a lack of detail in some of them.  While NASA typically selects missions after detailed design studies and then launches in four to five years, ESA selects concepts far in advance of launch and fills in the details after selection.  In addition, based on cost estimates from previous mission studies, some of the concepts as presented may well bust the €1B price cap.  So it is possible that a selected concept would be scaled back as definition progresses.

With this background, here are the solar system concepts.  Where the concept title itself doesn’t summarize the goals, I’ve quoted a sentence or two from the proposal that captures the essence the concept’s goals.

Sun

SOLARIS: SOLAR sail Investigation of the Sun  “SOLARIS from its highly inclined orbit around the Sun, aims to combine helioseismic and magnetic observations, solar irradiance measurements and EUV images at various latitudes.”  A solar sail would be used to place a spacecraft into an orbit close to the sun and eventually over the solar poles.

Venus

Possible future missions to Venus have been extensively studied, and so it’s no surprise that the three Venus concepts propose addressing similar goals and similar approaches.  The main difference appears to be in the ambition of the concepts.  The following summary of goals is quoted from the first of the three concepts and summarizes the overall goals for all three (although the focus for each is somewhat different): “A common thread for Venus and Mars is that the atmospheres on both planets appear to have undergone catastrophic change change—Mars may have lost almost all of its atmosphere, while Venus may have driven off much of the water in a runaway greenhouse and perhaps increased its atmosphere… A major part of understanding how Venus evolved as a terrestrial planet is its  [internal] thermal evolution.”

Venus: A Natural Planetary Laboratory.    Implementation: Two orbiters for atmospheric, surface, and interior measurements, balloon or unmanned aerial vehicle, short lifespan landers.

Venus: Key to understanding the evolution of terrestrial planets.  Single orbiter to study the atmosphere and surface, a balloon, and an optional atmospheric descent probe to measure the atmosphere and image the surface.

Europe returns to Venus.  Implementation: Single orbiter to study the atmosphere and surface and a balloon or unmanned aerial vehicle.

Lunar

Lunar Science as a Window into the Early History of the Solar System.  Implementation: multiple penetrators to sample volatiles at the poles and a return of lunar samples.

Science from the Farside of the Moon. Implementation: Multiple landers to conduct radio astronomy measurements and to measure the composition of the surface and surface impact rates.

Mars
Master: A Mission to Return a Sample from Mars to Earth.  Implementation: A single unified mission to land, grab a 150 g surface and atmospheric sample, and return it to Earth

Asteroids

INSIDER - Interior of Primordial Asteroids and the Origins of Earths Water. “The scientific objectives of the proposed INSIDER mission require the exploration of diverse primordial asteroids - possibly the smallest surviving protoplanets of our Solar System - in order to constrain the earliest stages of planetesimal formation.”  Implementation: Spacecraft to orbit several >100 km diameter main belt asteroids and a lander/rover to explore the surface of a volatile-rich asteroid.

The Case for an ESA L-Class Mission to Volatile-Rich Asteroids.  Explore one of the class of asteroids known as a main belt comet, which are in the asteroid belt but which have been observed to emit volatile gases like a comet.  Determine if bodies like these could have been the source for Earth’s water.  Implementation: Spacecraft to orbit one or more bodies.  Possibly carry a lander or return a sample to Earth.

Saturn, Uranus, and/or Neptune

In situ exploration of the giant planets and an entry probe concept for Saturn.  “Comparative studies of the elemental enrichments and isotopic abundances measured on the four giant planets would provide unique insights into the processes at work within our planetary system at the time of giant planet formation.”  Implementation: Put a probe into the atmosphere of Saturn, Uranus, or Neptune, with Saturn suggested as the highest priority.

Titan/Enceladus

These two proposals would continue the exploration of these two moons following the Cassini mission.  Fairly little detail is provided on implementation.

The Exploration of Titan with an Orbiter and a Lake-Probe.  Implementation: Saturn/Titan orbiter and a probe to land one of the polar lakes.

The science goals and mission concept for a future exploration of Titan and Enceladus.  Spacecraft delivers balloon to Titan and then performs multiple flybys of Enceladus before entering orbit around Titan.

Uranus and/or Neptune

The Science Case for an Orbital Mission to Uranus: Exploring the Origins and Evolution of Ice Giant Planets.  “The Ice Giants (Uranus and Neptune) are fundamentally different from the Gas
Giants (Jupiter and Saturn) in a number of ways and Uranus in particular is the most challenging to our understanding of planetary formation and evolution.”  Implementation: Orbiter to observe Uranus remotely, explore its magnetosphere, and flyby all major moons.  An atmospheric probe would study the structure and composition of the atmosphere.

The ODINUS Mission Concept – The Scientific Case for a Mission to the Ice Giant Planets with Twin spacecraft to Unveil the History of our Solar System.  Implementation: Two relatively modest spacecraft that would orbit Uranus and Neptune to allow comparative studies of these two ice giants and their systems of moons.

Neptune and Triton: Essential Pieces of the Solar System Puzzle.  “Neptune and Triton hold the keys to paradigm-changing advances in multiple fields of planetary science: Solar System and planetary formation, exoplanetary systems, geology and geophysics, atmospheric science, magnetospheric physics, and astrobiology.”  Implementation: Neptune orbiter to observe that planet and perform multiple flybys of Neptune.

General Solar System

Solar System Debris Disk.  “The dynamical and compositional interrelations between dust, interplanetary meteoroids and their parent objects are still largely unknown… [This mission] will shed light on all these questions by mapping our solar system in dust, using the unique combination of in-situ dust measurements, analyses of returned samples, and a bird’s eye view for infrared observations of our outer “home” debris disk and beyond.”  Implementation: Infrared telescope and a spacecraft that will analyze dust in-situ and return samples to Earth.

Exploring Planetary Origins and Environments in the Infrared.  “We propose an observatory--‐class ESA mission to provide spatially resolved infrared spectroscopy of solar system and planetary objects in all their guises, from their origins (remaining debris in our solar system and planet--‐forming discs around other stars) to their present--‐day appearance (atmospheres, surfaces and interactions with their host stars for planets in our solar system and beyond).  Implementation: Space-based thermal infrared telescope.

ExoPlanets

Several concepts propose telescopes that could observe exoplanets in addition to other targets.  Only the concept below addresses exoplanet studies as its focus.

Exploring Habitable Worlds beyond our Solar System.  “Among the remarkable feats of the exoplanet community has been the ingenuity with which new observing techniques have been invented and put into successful use over the past twenty years. We now have a diverse set of tools at our disposal, with which we can explore different aspects of exoplanetary systems. A number of complementary approaches have been identified that can address habitability from different angles. Coronographs and infrared interferometers have been studied at some level of detail, and other more recent concepts (external occulters and integratedlight telescopes) also show considerable promise. While none of these is ready yet for flight, the rapid progress over the past few years in the development of the key enabling technologies gives confidence that an exoplanet exploration mission will become viable technically and financially in time for implementation in the middle of the next decade.”  Implementation: Several possible approaches are given.

5 comments:

  1. I find it interesting to note the other white papers as well (as some intersect with exoplanets, solar system science or solar science – and the first two more or less directly relate to it):

    Solar science:
    Fundamental Processes in Solar Eruptive Events


    Interstellar medium:
    In situ Investigations of the Local Interstellar Medium


    "General purpose" space observatories and dedicated missions (e.g. astrophysics, astromentry):
    European Ultraviolet-Visible Observatory: Building galaxies, stars, planets and the ingredients for life among the stars

    Light from the Cosmic Frontier: Gamma-Ray Bursts

    PRISM: Polarized Radiation Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission

    Sub-arcsecond far-infrared space observatory: a science imperative

    Hypertelescope Optical Observatory

    Stellar Imager

    Chronos: A NIR Spectroscopic Galaxy Formation Survey

    The Gravitational Universe

    DEX - Dark Ages eXplorer

    The Hot and Energetic Universe

    Astrometry for Dynamics

    Space-Time Structure Explorer: Sub-microarcsecond astrometry for the 2030s

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  2. "How may ESA decide among what are a number of exciting proposals? My guess is that three criteria will be used. First, would the mission fundamentally enrich our understanding of an important world or class of objects? ..."

    I believe you're right. Acquisition of knowledge for knowledge's sake.

    Zubrin, Spudis, Lewis, Simberg and others have noted that earlier exploration efforts were to prepare for use or settlement. (For example Lewis and Clark).

    Use of space resources is perceived by many as a fringe notion. I would agree that it's a very difficult goal. But one with possibly immense benefits, therefore worth pursuing.

    I would hope that at least some folks at ESA are working towards helping entities like Planetary Resources or Golden Spike.

    If these goals were considered, more emphasis would be placed on earth's moon and the near earth asteroids.

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  3. Tony - Thanks for providing a list of the rest of the concepts. The post was getting long as it was.

    David - I believe that ESA's science program is focused on "just" science. It has other programmatic areas for enabling human exploration. And sometimes just science would be useful. The Marco Polo R near Earth asteroid return mission is in contention for the next Medium scale mission selection.

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  4. Yes, the list of missions we could do (and possibly should do) is daunting. Your focus on planetary science is a good choice, and in no way was it my aim to criticize that. I just was curios to know what competition the planetary science is facing (not that I am an expert in any of these fields…).

    I am just now looking through the abstracts, and I have misplaced one (the title threw me off):

    The EUVO European Ultraviolet-Visible Observatory seems in fact to be an dedicated exoplanet-atmosphere observatory – not an general purpose observatory as I assumed from the title. I think you should consider adding it to your list.

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  5. I've suddenly become bullish on certain types of sensor R + D. Much as NASA was an early customer for hydrogen fuel cells and helped develop some solar cell technologies, I think can be a good future WMD/tyranny sensor, early prototyper. Non-Orwellian single-purpose sensor networks can probably prevent more future tyrants and WMDs than the tyranny risks such networks threaten to enact. I'll be more specific about which sensor types I'll be cheerleading.

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