In a recently published paper, NASA scientists and engineers give new details about the agency’s Deep Atmosphere Venus Investigation of Noble gases, Chemistry, and Imaging (DAVINCI) mission, which will descend through the layered Venus atmosphere to the surface of the planet in mid-2031. DAVINCI is the first mission to study Venus using both spacecraft flybys and a descent probe.
DAVINCI, a flying analytical chemistry
laboratory, will measure critical aspects of Venus’ massive
atmosphere-climate system for the first time, many of which have been
measurement goals for Venus since the early 1980s. It will also provide
the first descent imaging of the mountainous highlands of Venus while mapping
their rock composition and surface relief at scales not possible from orbit.
The mission supports measurements of undiscovered gases present in small
amounts and the deepest atmosphere, including the key ratio of hydrogen
isotopes – components of water that help reveal the history of water, either as
liquid water oceans or steam within the early atmosphere.
The DAVINCI deep atmosphere probe descends
through the dense carbon dioxide atmosphere of Venus towards the Alpha Regio
mountains. Credits: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
The mission’s carrier, relay and imaging spacecraft (CRIS) has two onboard instruments that will study the planet’s clouds and map its highland areas during flybys of Venus and will also drop a small descent probe with five instruments that will provide a medley of new measurements at very high precision during its descent to the hellish Venus surface.
“This ensemble of chemistry,
environmental, and descent imaging data will paint a picture of the layered
Venus atmosphere and how it interacts with the surface in the mountains of
Alpha Regio, which is twice the size of Texas,” said Jim Garvin, lead author of
the paper in the Planetary Science Journal and DAVINCI principal investigator
from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “These
measurements will allow us to evaluate historical aspects of the atmosphere as well
as detect special rock types at the surface such as granites while also
looking for tell-tale landscape features that could tell us about erosion or
other formational processes.”
DAVINCI will make use of three Venus
gravity assists, which save fuel by using the planet’s gravity to change the
speed and/or direction of the CRIS flight system. The first two gravity assists
will set CRIS up for a Venus flyby to perform remote sensing in the ultraviolet
and the near infrared light, acquiring over 60 gigabits of new data about the
atmosphere and surface. The third Venus gravity assist will set up the
spacecraft to release the probe for entry, descent, science, and touchdown,
plus follow-on transmission to Earth.
The first flyby of Venus will be six and
half months after launch and it will take two years to get the probe into
position for entry into the atmosphere over Alpha Regio under ideal lighting at
“high noon,” with the goal of measuring the landscapes of Venus at scales
ranging from 328 feet (100 meters) down to finer than one meter. Such scales
enable lander style geologic studies in the mountains of Venus without
requiring landing.
Once the CRIS system is about two days
away from Venus, the probe flight system will be released along with the
titanium three foot (one meter) diameter probe safely encased inside. The probe
will begin to interact with the Venus upper atmosphere at about 75 miles (120
kilometers) above the surface. The science probe will commence science
observations after jettisoning its heat shield around 42 miles (67 kilometers)
above the surface. With the heatshield jettisoned, the probe’s inlets will
ingest atmospheric gas samples for detailed chemistry measurements of the sort
that have been made on Mars with the Curiosity rover. During its hour-long
descent to the surface, the probe will also acquire hundreds of images as soon
as it emerges under the clouds at around 100,000 feet (30,500 meters) above the
local surface.
“The probe will touch-down in the Alpha
Regio mountains but is not required to operate once it lands, as all of the
required science data will be taken before reaching the surface.” said
Stephanie Getty, deputy principal investigator from Goddard. “If we
survive the touchdown at about 25 miles per hour (12 meters/second), we could
have up to 17-18 minutes of operations on the surface under ideal conditions.”
DAVINCI is tentatively scheduled to launch
June 2029 and enter the Venusian atmosphere in June 2031.
“No previous mission within the Venus
atmosphere has measured the chemistry or environments at the detail that
DAVINCI’s probe can do,” said Garvin. “Furthermore, no previous Venus
mission has descended over the tesserae highlands of Venus, and none have
conducted descent imaging of the Venus surface. DAVINCI will build on what
Huygens probe did at Titan and improve on what previous in situ Venus missions
have done, but with 21st century capabilities and sensors.”
NASA Goddard is the principal investigator
institution for DAVINCI and will perform project management for the mission,
provide science instruments as well as project systems engineering to develop
the probe flight system. Goddard also leads the project science support team
with an external science team from across the US. Discovery Program class missions like DAVINCI complement NASA's
larger “flagship” planetary science explorations, with the goal of achieving
outstanding results by launching more smaller missions using fewer resources
and shorter development times. They are managed for NASA’s Planetary Science
Division by the Planetary Missions Program Office at Marshall Space Flight
Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
Major partners for DAVINCI are Lockheed
Martin, Denver, Colorado, The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena,
California, Malin Space Science Systems, San Diego, California, NASA’s Langley
Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, NASA’s Ames Research Center at Moffett
Federal Airfield in California's Silicon Valley, and KinetX, Inc., Tempe,
Arizona, as well as the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
For more information on NASA’s DAVINCI
mission, visit: https://ssed.gsfc.nasa.gov/davinici
Source: DAVINCI
Mission To Take the Plunge Through Massive Atmosphere of Venus | NASA
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