• NASA Selects CubeSat, SmallSat Mission Concept Studies

    From baalke@earthlink.net@21:1/5 to All on Tue Apr 4 23:43:09 2017
    https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=6791

    NASA Selects CubeSat, SmallSat Mission Concept Studies
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    March 23, 2017

    NASA has selected 10 studies under the Planetary Science Deep Space SmallSat Studies (PSDS3) program to develop mission concepts using small satellites
    to investigate Venus, Earth's moon, asteroids, Mars and the outer planets.

    For these studies, small satellites are defined as less than 180 kilograms
    in mass (about 400 pounds). CubeSats are built to standard specifications
    of 1 unit (U), which is equal to about 4x4x4 inches (10x10x10 centimeters). They often are launched into orbit as auxiliary payloads, significantly reducing costs.

    "These small but mighty satellites have the potential to enable transformational
    science," said Jim Green, director of the Planetary Science Division at
    NASA Headquarters in Washington. "They will provide valuable information
    to assist in planning future Announcements of Opportunity, and to guide
    NASA's development of small spacecraft technologies for deep space science investigation."

    NASA's Science Mission Directorate is developing a small satellite strategy, with the goal of identifying high-priority science objectives in each discipline that can be addressed with CubeSats and SmallSats, managed
    for appropriate cost and risk. This multi-disciplinary approach will leverage and partner with the growing commercial sector to collaboratively drive instrument and sensor innovation.

    The PSDS3 awardees were recognized this week at the 48th Lunar and Planetary Society Conference in The Woodlands, Texas. The total value of the awards
    is $3.6 million.

    The recipients are:

    Venus

    Christophe Sotin, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California: Cupid's Arrow, a 66-pound (30-kilogram) probe to measure noble gases and
    their isotopes to investigate the geological evolution of Venus and why
    Venus and Earth have evolved so differently.

    Valeria Cottini, University of Maryland, College Park: CubeSat UV Experiment (CUVE), a 12-unit CubeSat orbiter to measure ultraviolet absorption and nightglow emissions to understand Venus' atmospheric dynamics.

    Moon

    Suzanne Romaine, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, Massachusetts:
    CubeSat X-ray Telescope (CubeX), a 12-unit CubeSat to map the elemental composition mapping of airless bodies such as the moon, to understand
    their formation and evolutionary history using X-ray pulsar timing for
    deep space navigation.

    Timothy Stubbs, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland:
    Bi-sat Observations of the Lunar Atmosphere above Swirls (BOLAS), tethered 12-unit CubeSats to investigate the lunar hydrogen cycle by simultaneously measuring electromagnetic fields near the surface of the moon, and incoming solar winds high above.

    Asteroids

    Jeffrey Plescia, Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory,
    Laurel, Maryland: Asteroid Probe Experiment (APEX), a SmallSat with a deployable seismometer to rendezvous with the asteroid Apophis and directly explore its interior structure, surface properties, and rotational state.

    Benton Clark, Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company, Littleton, Colorado: CubeSat Asteroid Encounters for Science and Reconnaissance (CAESAR), a constellation of 6-unit CubeSats to evaluate the bulk properties of asteroids to assess their physical structure, and to provide constraints on their formation and evolution.

    Mars

    David Minton, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana: Chariot to the
    Moons of Mars, a 12-unit CubeSat with a deployable drag skirt to produce high-resolution imagery and surface material composition of Phobos and
    Deimos, to help understand how they were formed.

    Anthony Colaprete, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California: Aeolus, a 24-unit CubeSat to directly measure vertically-resolved global
    winds to help determine the global energy balance at Mars and understand
    daily climate variability.

    Icy Bodies and Outer Planets

    Kunio Sayanagi, Hampton University, Virginia: Small Next-generation Atmospheric Probe (SNAP), an atmospheric entry probe to measure vertical cloud structure, stratification, and winds to help understand the chemical and physical processes that shape the atmosphere of Uranus.

    Robert Ebert, Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio: JUpiter MagnetosPheric boundary ExploreR (JUMPER), a SmallSat to explore Jupiter's magnetosphere, including characterizing the solar wind upstream of the magnetosphere
    to provide science context for future missions such as the Europa Clipper.

    For more information about NASA's CubeSat activities, visit:

    https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cubesats/index.html

    News Media Contact
    Andrew Good
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
    818-393-2433
    andrew.c.good@jpl.nasa.gov

    2017-085

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