Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Search for life on Venus could start with a private company

- By Jonathan O’Callaghan

Elon Musk wants to settle humans on Mars with his rocket company SpaceX. Amazon’s founder, Jeff Bezos, wants a trillion people living in space. But the chief executive of one private space company is approachin­g space exploratio­n differentl­y — and now aims to play a part in the search for life on Venus.

On Monday, scientists announced the astonishin­g discovery of phosphine in the atmosphere of Venus. This chemical could have been produced by a biological source, but scientists won’t know for sure without sending a spacecraft to the planet.

As luck would have it, Rocket Lab, a private small rocket company founded in New Zealand, has been working on such a mission. The company has developed a small satellite, called Photon, that it plans to launch on its own Electron rocket as soon as 2023.

“This mission is to go and see if we can find life,” said Peter Beck, Rocket Lab’s founder and CEO. “Obviously, this discovery of phosphine really adds strength to that possibilit­y. So I think we need to go and have a look there.”

Rocket Lab has launched a dozen rockets to space, putting small satellites into orbit for private companies, NASA and the U.S. military. It also has a mission to the moon in the works with NASA, called CAPSTONE, scheduled to launch in early 2021.

The company began looking into the possibilit­y of a mission to Venus last year, before it knew about the phosphine discovery. Although its Electron rocket is much smaller than the ones used by SpaceX and other competitor­s, it could send a space probe to Venus.

The company’s plan is to develop the mission inhouse and to mostly selffund it at a cost in the tens of millions of dollars, though it is seeking other partners to defray the cost. The Photon spacecraft, a small, 660pound satellite that had its first test flight to orbit this month, would launch when Earth and Venus align for the shortest journey and arrive there in several months.

The spacecraft will be designed to fly past Venus and take measuremen­ts and pictures, rather than enter orbit. But it will be able to release a small probe weighing 82 pounds into the planet’s atmosphere, taking readings and looking for further evidence of life.

The probe would enter the atmosphere at about 6 miles per second, Mr. Beck said, falling through the skies of Venus with no parachute. As it travels through the region in the atmosphere where phosphine was discovered and airborne microbial life could be present, it would take readings and beam them back to Earth via the Photon spacecraft before being destroyed.

Rocket Lab is working with scientists on which scientific instrument­s the probe and spacecraft might carry, including Sara Seager of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, one of the researcher­s involved in the discovery of phosphine. Although the probe could likely carry only a single instrument, there is a lot it could accomplish.

Ms. Seager said they could likely put an infrared spectromet­er or “some kind of gas analyzer” on board to confirm the presence of phosphine and measure other gases.

“Looking for other gases that aren’t expected could also be a sign of life,” she said.

Ms. Seager is also part of a team working with Breakthrou­gh Initiative­s, which is funded by Russian investor Yuri Milner. Over the next six months, her team will study what sort of small, medium and large missions could be sent to Venus in the near future to look for life.

Rocket Lab’s modest mission is limited in what it can achieve. The probe will not survive long, meaning its scientific return will be brief even if meaningful.

 ?? Kieran Fanning/Rocket Lab via The New York Times ?? A Rocket Lab Electron rocket is mounted on its Launch Complex 1 on the east coast of New Zealand’s North Island. Rocket Lab may be able to send a spacecraft to the clouds of Venus long before NASA or other space agencies can.
Kieran Fanning/Rocket Lab via The New York Times A Rocket Lab Electron rocket is mounted on its Launch Complex 1 on the east coast of New Zealand’s North Island. Rocket Lab may be able to send a spacecraft to the clouds of Venus long before NASA or other space agencies can.

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