The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

NASA funds study of Wesleyan professor’s Venus Mission concept

- By Lauren Rubenstein Editor’s note: This article is reprinted with permission from the News @ Wesleyan blog.

MIDDLETOWN — Martha Gilmore, the George I. Seney Professor of Geology and professor of earth and environmen­tal sciences, believes we have a lot to learn from studying Venus — yet the United States has not sent a mission to the Earthsized planet since the early 1990s.

That’s why Gilmore has proposed a major flagship mission concept study to assess whether Venus was ever a habitable planet by looking at its rocks and atmosphere.

In October, NASA agreed to fund the planetary mission concept on Venus submitted by Gilmore, a planetary geologist, and colleagues at several other institutio­ns, who come from varied discipline­s. Gilmore, who is the principal investigat­or, said NASA received 54 proposals and selected 10 to feed into the next Planetary Decadal Survey. Theirs was the only proposal on Venus to receive funding.

In 2020, the National Academy of Science will convene a panel of scientists and engineers to determine the scientific priorities for Planetary Science over the period 202332. This Planetary Decadal Survey is conducted every 10 years and is tasked with recommendi­ng a portfolio of missions to NASA.

The mission concepts that were funded will be developed for considerat­ion by the Decadal Survey. In the coming months, Gilmore will be meeting and communicat­ing regularly with her science team and conducting mission design runs at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.

Final reports are due to the Decadal Survey in June 2020, and will describe mission architectu­re, cost, and how the mission will address the scientific priorities of the Decadal Survey and NASA.

Gilmore’s expertise is on the surface morphology and compositio­n of Venus, Mars, and Earth, and her PhD focused on Venus during the United States’ Magellan mission. She explained that all three planets are rocky, and there is evidence that they all had oceans early in solar system history.

Scientists believe that Mars’s ocean dried up first — within about 1 billion years — and that Venus’s ocean may have lasted for 2 or 3 billion years.

“Thus, for most of solar system history, there were two Earthsized planets with oceans,” said Gilmore. “Was Venus habitable like the Earth and if so, what changed?”

Gilmore and colleagues have proposed a flagshipcl­ass mission concept, meaning it must be selected by NASA and is estimated to cost in the billions of dollars.

They propose sending one orbiter, two orbiting SmallSats, two shortlived landers/probes, a balloon, and one longlived lander to Venus to study its rocks and atmosphere.

The goals outlined in the mission concept include understand­ing the history of volatiles and liquid water on Venus and determinin­g if Venus was habitable; studying the compositio­n of Venus’s surface and its implicatio­ns for past and present climate; and studying the geologic history of Venus and how tectonical­ly and volcanical­ly active the planet is today.

The proposed mission “would provide major, unpreceden­ted advancemen­ts in our understand­ing of the formation, evolution, and habitabili­ty of terrestria­l planets,” Gilmore and her colleagues stated in a presentati­on they made at the 10th Moscow Solar System Symposium in October.

“One of the goals of humanity is to find another Earth,” said Gilmore. “It turns out that the most accessible and Earthlike planet in the galaxy is Venus. Venus helps us understand the conditions for habitabili­ty in our solar system and for the thousands of Earthsized exoplanets we continue to discover. It’s time to go to Venus.”

Lauren Rubenstein is Wesleyan University’s director of media relations and public relations.

 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? Martha Gilmore is Wesleyan University’s George I. Seney Professor of Geology.
Contribute­d photo Martha Gilmore is Wesleyan University’s George I. Seney Professor of Geology.

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