Orlando Sentinel

NASA whittles New Frontiers list to 2 ideas

Flying robot visits alien moon versus exploratio­n of comet

- By Sarah Kaplan

NASA’s newest mission will either land a quadcopter-like spacecraft on the surface of Saturn’s moon Titan or collect a sample from the nucleus of a comet.

The two proposals were selected from a group of 12 submitted to the New Frontiers program, which supports mid-level planetary science missions.

The first, called Dragonfly, would be an unpreceden­ted project to send a flying robot to an alien moon. Equipped with instrument­s capable of identifyin­g large organic molecules, the quadcopter would be able to fly to multiple locations hundreds of miles apart to study the landscape on Titan.

This large, cold moon of Saturn features a thick atmosphere and lakes and rivers of liquid methane, and scientists think that a watery ocean may lurk beneath its frozen crust.

It’s “an environmen­t that we know has the ingredient­s for life,” said lead investigat­or Elizabeth Turtle, a researcher at Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory. With Dragonfly, “we can evaluate how far prebiotic chemistry has progressed.”

The Comet Astrobiolo­gy Exploratio­n SAmple Return, or CAESAR, mission would circle back to the comet 67P/ Churyumov-Gerasimenk­o, which was visited by the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft from 2014 to 2016. After rendezvous­ing with the Mount Fuji-size space rock, CAESAR would suck up a sample from its surface and send it back to Earth, where it would arrive in November 2038.

NASA has sampled a comet before; the Stardust mission collected dust from a comet’s gassy outer envelope, called its “coma.” But this would be the first mission to return material from a comet’s icy surface.

“Comets are among the most scientific­ally important objects in the solar system, but they’re also among the most poorly understood,” said Cornell University researcher Steve Squyres, the lead investigat­or for the mission.

Researcher­s think comets delivered water and organic molecules to early Earth, potentiall­y contributi­ng to the origins of life.

Surface samples from 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenk­o will include precious “volatile” molecules that easily turn to gas but are important for understand­ing the body’s origin.

The selection of the two concepts was announced in a news conference last week. The missions now enter a concept study phase.

A final selection will be made in July 2019, and whichever spacecraft is chosen will launch sometime in 2025.

NASA has three New Frontiers missions already in flight: New Horizons, which flew past Pluto in 2015; Juno, which is orbiting Jupiter; and OSIRIS REx, a spacecraft en route to the asteroid Bennu that will send back a sample from the rock’s surface in September 2023.

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