NASA Targets Moons of Mars for Potential Robotic Mission. - TopicsExpress



          

NASA Targets Moons of Mars for Potential Robotic Mission. Scientists and engineers at NASAs Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., are drawing up a low-cost mission concept that would send a robotic spacecraft to one of Mars two tiny satellites, Phobos and Deimos. The probe would be based heavily on the space agencys $280 million Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE), an Ames-led effort that has been circling Earths moon since September 2013. We think we can do LADEE 2 for a few hundred million [dollars] and go to Phobos, Ames director Pete Worden said during a presentation in February at the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts symposium at Stanford University.The original LADEE relies not on custom-crafted, mission-specific infrastructure but rather an Ames-developed modular common spacecraft bus that can be adapted for a variety of uses and destinations. The modular approach would help keep the potential LADEE 2s costs down. Weve got some spare hardware hanging around here that we could make it even lower-cost, he said during a NASA budget news briefing on March 4. LADEE 2 could launch sometime after NASAs bold asteroid-capture mission, Worden added. The space agency is still mapping out the details of its asteroid-redirect effort — which aims to drag a near-Earth space rock into a stable lunar orbit for future visitation by astronauts — but current projections call for lofting the capture probe around 2019, with the asteroid arriving in lunar orbit in 2024 or 2025. There is no money for LADEE 2 in the NASA budget, Worden stressed, so it remains a concept mission for now. This is one were very excited about, he said. Wed like to see it be a planned mission, but we have some work to do first. Most scientists think Phobos and Deimos are former asteroids that were captured by Mars gravity. Phobos is 14 miles (22 kilometers) wide on average, while Deimos has a diameter of just 7.7 miles (12.4 km). (For comparison, Earths moon is 2,160 miles, or 3,475 km, wide). A robotic mission to Phobos or Deimos could help pave the way for an eventual manned trip to one of these moons. The prospect of a human base camp on Phobos or Deimos is enticing to many researchers, who envision teleoperating rovers on the Martian surface and studying samples launched from the Red Planet up into orbit. (Phobos orbits a mere 3,700 miles, or 6,000 km, from Mars; Deimos circles at an average distance of 12,470 miles, or 20,070 km). NASA officials have said repeatedly that putting boots on Mars is the long-term goal of the agencys human spaceflight program. But they are considering manned missions to Phobos or Deimos as a potential precursor, and possibly as a way to get astronauts to the vicinity of the Red Planet by the mid-2030s — a goal laid out by President Barack Obama in 2010. NASA already has two functioning rovers on the Martian surface — Opportunity and Curiosity — and two operating orbiters, Mars Odyssey and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Another orbiter, called MAVEN, launched in November and is scheduled to arrive in September. The agency also plans to launch a lander called InSight toward the Red Planet in 2016 and a sample-caching, Curiosity-like rover in 2020.space/25312-nasa-mars-moons-phobos-deimos.html
Posted on: Thu, 03 Apr 2014 14:52:26 +0000

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