12.6 C
New York
Monday, October 14, 2024
pCloud Premium

NASA to launch Europa Clipper mission to an icy moon of Jupiter


For decades, an icy moon of Jupiter has been considered one of the most promising places to search for extraterrestrial life in the solar system. Thought to have an underground ocean and a potentially habitable environment, Europa has long seemed a tantalizing target in our cosmic backyard.

Now, humanity is poised to get a closer look at Jupiter’s fourth-largest moon.

As early as midday Monday, NASA plans to launch a new robotic mission to Jupiter. Dubbed Europa Clipper, the probe is the largest spacecraft it has ever built for a planetary science mission.

Assuming the launch does not face any further delays, Europa Clipper is scheduled to lift off at 12:06 p.m. ET Monday atop a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

The launch was originally scheduled for Thursday, but NASA was forced to stand down because of Hurricane Milton, which made landfall late Wednesday along Florida’s west coast, near Siesta Key. Kennedy Space Center was closed as the storm tore across the state, lashing much of the Florida Peninsula with powerful winds and heavy rain.

The delay was a minor setback in a mission that has taken more than a decade of planning and development.

“It feels surreal,” said Jordan Evans, the mission’s project manager at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “There have been battles at every level, from early on with the initial concept for the mission, through getting approved, through each milestone and overcoming various problems along the way. To be at this point, watching the team get ready, is incredible.”

Europa Clipper is not embarking on a life-detection mission. Rather, it will study the composition of the ice-encased moon, along with its internal structure and geology. That information could help scientists confirm whether Europa has the right ingredients to support life now — or whether it did at some point.

“We are looking for a habitable environment,” said Bonnie Buratti, the mission’s deputy project scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “We’re trying to look for the necessities for life, which are liquid water — and we’re pretty sure that’s there — the right chemistry and energy, whether from active geology or something else, that acts almost like a battery to push life along.”

Buratti said there is strong scientific evidence that a vast ocean lurks beneath the moon’s icy surface. Europa’s internal ocean, in fact, is estimated to have twice the volume of all of Earth’s oceans combined, according to NASA.

Jupiter's moon Europa
A mosaic image of Jupiter’s moon Europa, obtained by the camera onboard NASA’s Galileo spacecraft on Nov. 25, 1999.NASA

Europa Clipper is scheduled to enter Jupiter’s orbit in 2030 after a six-year journey of 1.8 billion miles.

It will give researchers new insights via 49 close flybys of the moon over four years.

“We’ll definitely get the thickness of the ice crust and whether there are little ponds in there,” Buratti said. “With the ocean, I think we’ll eventually understand how deep it is.”

To make those observations, the spacecraft will fly through harsh radiation environments generated by Jupiter’s enormous magnetic field, which NASA says is around 20,000 times stronger than Earth’s.

“If we were to just go into orbit around Europa and study it, the radiation would likely kill off even the most radiation-hardened electronics within one to two months,” Evans said.

Instead, mission managers developed a way for the probe to orbit Jupiter in harmony with the icy moon — a kind of cosmic duet that will help preserve its instruments from prolonged exposure to punishing radiation.

“So, every six times that Europa goes around Jupiter, or every 21 days, we’ll be in the exact spot in the universe to be right next to Europa,” Evans said. “And every flyby will be different, so we can get near global coverage of the moon.”

But the team will need to exercise patience. Before it reaches Jupiter, the spacecraft will first pass Mars and then swing around Earth again, using both planets’ gravity to slingshot it deeper into space.

Europa was discovered in 1610 by the Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei. The icy body is the fourth-largest of Jupiter’s 95 known moons.

Several space probes have made observations of Europa before — including NASA’s Voyager 1, Voyager 2 and Galileo missions — but this will be the first dedicated mission to the moon and NASA’s first time studying an ocean world beyond Earth.

That milestone has been a long time coming for Buratti, who wrote her thesis on Europa as a graduate student at Cornell University in the 1980s.

“I’ve only actually been on this mission for 2½ years. I didn’t start on it,” she said. “But I’m just overjoyed to get to come back to something that is so near and dear to my heart. It really is a dream.”



Source link

Odisha Expo
Odisha Expohttps://www.odishaexpo.com
Odisha Expo is one of the Largest News Aggregator of Odisha, Stay Updated about the latest news with Odisha Expo from around the world. Stay hooked for more updates.

Related Articles

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe
Best Lifetime Deals on SaaSspot_img

Latest Articles

Legal complaint filed against Fifa's 'abuse of dominance'

0
The top European leagues and players' union Fifpro file a legal complaint against Fifa over what they claim is an "abuse of dominance". Source...

Pope urged at LGBTQ meeting to reverse church ban on gender-affirming care

0
VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis faced calls to overturn the Catholic Church’s ban on gender-affirming care for transgender people on Saturday when he...

Sinner wins in Shanghai to extend Djokovic’s wait for 100th title – Sport

0
SHANGHAI: Novak Djokovic’s bid to add a 100th singles title to his trophy cabinet on Sunday was dashed after he was beaten 7-6(4),...

Man posed as utility worker charged with murder over home invasion as police hunt...

0
A man who was caught on camera posing as a utility worker to gain entrance to a Michigan house on Friday has been...

‌ENG vs PAK | Stokes returns after injury as England announces playing XI for...

0
Following their thumping victory to earn four back-to-back wins against Pakistan at their home, England aims to seal the deal with two major...