NASA Selects Three Finalists for Future Space Science Mission to Venus, an Asteroid or the Moon

NASA has chosen three proposals as candidates for the agency's next space venture to an additional celestial body in our solar system. The ultimate project selected in mid-2011 may provide a better understanding of Earth's formation or perhaps the origin of life on our planet.


The intended missions would probe the atmosphere and crust of Venus; return a piece of a near-Earth asteroid for analysis; or drop a robotic lander into a basin at the moon's south pole to return lunar rocks back to Earth for study.


NASA will choose one proposal for full progress after complete mission concept studies are completed and reviewed. The studies begin during 2010, and the selected mission must be prepared for launch no later than Dec. 30, 2018. Mission cost, excluding the launch vehicle, is limited to $650 million.


"These are projects that motivate and excite young scientists, engineers and the public," said Ed Weiler, associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "These three proposals provide the best science value among eight submitted to NASA this year."


Each proposal team primarily will receive approximately $3.3 million in 2010 to conduct a 12-month mission concept study that focuses on implementation feasibility, cost, management and technical plans. Studies also will comprise plans for educational outreach and small business opportunities.


The selected proposals are:

  1. The Surface and Atmosphere Geochemical Explorer, or SAGE, mission to Venus would liberate a probe to descend through the planet's atmosphere. During descent, instruments would conduct wide measurements of the atmosphere's composition and obtain meteorological data. The probe then would land on the surface of Venus, where its abrading tool would expose mutually a weathered and a pristine surface area to measure its composition and mineralogy. Scientists hope to recognize the origin of Venus and why it is so different from Earth. Larry Esposito of the University of Colorado in Boulder, is the principal investigator.
  2. The Origins Spectral Interpretation Resource Identification Security Regolith Explorer spacecraft, called Osiris-Rex, would rendezvous and orbit a prehistoric asteroid. After extensive measurements, instruments would accumulate more than two ounces of material from the asteriod's surface for return to Earth. The returned samples would help scientists better undertand and answer long-held questions about the formation of our solar system and the origin of complex molecules necessary for life. Michael Drake, of the University of Arizona in Tucson, is the principal investigator.
  3. MoonRise: Lunar South Pole-Aitken Basin Sample Return Mission would place a lander in a broad basin near the moon's south pole and return approximately two pounds of lunar resources for study. This region of the lunar surface is supposed to harbor rocks excavated from the moon's mantle. The samples would provide new insight into the early history of the Earth-moon system. Bradley Jolliff, of Washington University in St. Louis, is the principal investigator.

The proposals were submitted to NASA on July 31, 2009, in response to the New Frontiers Program 2009 Announcement of Opportunity. New Frontiers seeks to discover the solar system with frequent, medium-class spacecraft missions that will conduct high-quality, focused scientific investigations intended to enhance understanding of the solar system.

The concluding selection will become the third mission in the program. New Horizons, NASA’s first New Frontiers mission, launched in 2006, will fly by the Pluto-Charon system in 2015 then target another Kuiper Belt object for study. The second mission, called Juno, is intended to orbit Jupiter from pole to pole for the first time, conducting an in-depth study of the giant planet's atmosphere and interior. It is slated for launch in August 2011.

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