Paper
11 July 1997 The Europa Ocean Discovery mission
Bradley C. Edwards, Christopher F. Chyba, James B. Abshire, Joseph A. Burns, Paul Geissler, Alex S. Konopliv, Michael C. Malin, Steven J. Ostro, Charley Rhodes, Chuck Rudiger, Xuan-Min Shao, David E. Smith, Steven W. Squyres, Peter C. Thomas, Chauncey W. Uphoff, Gerald D. Walberg, Charles L. Werner, Charles F. Yoder, Maria T. Zuber
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Ever since the first proposal that tidal heating of Europa by Jupiter might lead to liquid water oceans below Europa's ice cover, scientists have speculated over the exobiological implications of such an ocean. Liquid water is thought to be an essential ingredient for life, so the existence of a second water ocean in the Solar System would be of paramount importance in any search for life beyond Earth. We present here a Discovery-class mission concept (Europa Ocean Discovery) to determine the existence of a liquid water ocean on Europa and to characterize Europa's surface structure. The technical goal of the Europa Ocean Discovery mission is to study Europa with an orbiting spacecraft. This goal is challenging but entirely feasible within the Discovery envelope. There are four key challenges: entering Europan orbit, generating power, surviving long enough in the radiation environment to return valuable science, and completing the mission within the Discovery program's constraints on launch vehicle (Delta II or smaller) and budget (approximately $DOL250M plus launch). Europa Ocean Discovery will carry four scientific instruments to study Europa: (1) an ice-penetrating radar sounder to probe tens of kilometers below Europa's surface; (2) a laser altimeter, to determine the height and phase of Europa's time-varying tidal bulge; (3) an X-band transponder to determine Europa's gravity field; and (4) a solid-state optical imager. These instruments will provide important information about Europa's surface, subsurface, and will provide definitive evidence about the existence of a Europan ocean.
© (1997) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Bradley C. Edwards, Christopher F. Chyba, James B. Abshire, Joseph A. Burns, Paul Geissler, Alex S. Konopliv, Michael C. Malin, Steven J. Ostro, Charley Rhodes, Chuck Rudiger, Xuan-Min Shao, David E. Smith, Steven W. Squyres, Peter C. Thomas, Chauncey W. Uphoff, Gerald D. Walberg, Charles L. Werner, Charles F. Yoder, and Maria T. Zuber "The Europa Ocean Discovery mission", Proc. SPIE 3111, Instruments, Methods, and Missions for the Investigation of Extraterrestrial Microorganisms, (11 July 1997); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.278778
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Space operations

Radar

Jupiter

Liquids

Ocean optics

Knowledge management

Cameras

RELATED CONTENT

The design of the wide field monitor for the LOFT...
Proceedings of SPIE (July 31 2014)
The wide field monitor onboard the eXTP mission
Proceedings of SPIE (July 18 2018)
Television Optics For The Voyager Mission To Jupiter And Saturn
Proceedings of SPIE (September 27 1979)
The Coral Reef Satellite Mission
Proceedings of SPIE (November 16 2004)

Back to Top