Title: Penetrators for Europa
1Penetrators for Europa
Professor Andrew Coates on behalf of UK
Penetrator Consortium
MSSL/UCL UK
2Europa Penetrators
- Low mass projectiles 4KgPDS
-
- High impact speed 200-500 m/s
- Very tough 10-50kgee
- Penetrate surface 0.5-few metres
- Perform science from below surface
3Penetrator Payload/Science
- A nominal 2kg payload
- Seismometers - interior structure (existence/size
of subterrannean ocean) and seismic activity - Chemical sensors subsurface refactory/volatile
(organic/ astrobiologic (e.g. sulphur mass spec)
material arising from interior - Mineralogy/astrobiology camera subsurface
mineralogy and possible astrobiological
material - Accelerometers hardness/layering/
compositionof subsurface material. (future
landing site assessment) - Thermal sensors - subsurface temperatures
- other instruments beeping transmitter,
magnetometer, radiation sensors, etc - descent camera (surface morphology, landing site
location)
Micro-seismometer Imperial College
Ion trap spectrometer Open University
4Science/Technology Requirements
- Target
- Region of upwelled interior material (e.g.
sulphur). - 2 penetrators would allow improved seismic
results and natural redundancy. - Lifetime
- Only minutes/hours required for camera,
accelerometer, chemistry, thermal
mineralogy/astrobiologic measurements. - An orbital period (few days) for seismic
measurements. (requires RHU) - Spacecraft support
- 7-9 years cruise phase, health reporting
5Preliminary Estimated Mass
6Heritage
- Lunar-A and DS2 space qualified.
- Military have been successfully firing
instrumented projectiles for many years to
comparable levels of gee forces into concrete and
steel. - 40,000gee qualified electronics exist (and
re-used). - Currently developing similar penetrators for
MoonLITE. - Payload heritage
- Accelerometers, thermometers, sample drill,
geophone fully space qualified. - Seismometers (ExoMars) chemical sensors
(Rosetta) heritage but require impact
ruggedizing. - Mineralogy camera new but simple.
When asked to describe the condition of a probe
that had impacted 2m of concrete at 300 m/s a UK
expert described the device as a bit scratched!
7Current Development Status
Full-scale trial Scheduled May 19-23 2008 Fire
3 penetrators at 300m/s impact velocity
0.56m
8Impact trial 19-23 May08
9Impact trial 19-23 May08
10Impact trial 19-23 May08
11Impact trial 19-23 May08
12Impact trial 19-23 May08
13Impact Trial Objectives
- Demonstrate survivability of penetrator shell,
accelerometers and power system. - Determine internal acceleration environmentat
different positions within penetrator. - Extend predictive modelling to new impact and
penetrator materials. - Assess impact on penetrator subsystems and
instruments. - Assess alternative packing methods.
- Assess interconnect philosophy.
14Imminent Next Steps
- MoonLITE bids in preparation for -
- 2 yr development to bring ruggedization of
penetrator subsystems and instruments up to TRL
5. - Phase-A study for mission, currently in
discussion with BNSC and NASA. - Include study of cold environment impact into
harder icy material (lunar poles)
5 inner compartments for full scale penetrator
trial
- 3 penetrator firings
- Normal incidence into dry sand at 300m/s
15Trial Hardware - Status
Inners Stack
16Penetrators Conclusions
- No great history of failure - only 1 planetary
delivery to date - Significant TRL with previous space qualified
technology - A useful tool in the toolbox of planetary
exploration - Capable of addressing fundamental astrobiology
signatures and habitability - Provide ground truth new information not
possible from orbit - Provide useful landing information for future
missions.
- Penetrator website
- http//www.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/planetary/missions/Micro
_Penetrators.php - email rag_at_mssl.ucl.ac.uk
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