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Persephone: A Pluto-System Orbiter and Kuiper Belt Explorer

Authors :
Howett, Carly
Robbins, Stuart
Holler, Bryan J.
Hendrix, Amanda
Fielhauer, Karl
Perry, Mark
Siddique, Fazle
Apland, Clint
Leary, James
Stern, S. Alan
Elliott, Heather
Nimmo, Francis
Porter, Simon B.
Protopapa, Silvia
Singer, Kelsi N.
Tucker, Orenthal J.
Verbiscer, Anne J.
Andrews, Bruce
Bushman, Stewart
Crifasi, Adam
Crowley, Doug
Edwards, Clint
Ernst, Carolyn M.
Fonville, Blair
Frankford, David
Gallagher, Dan
Holdridge, Mark
Hunt, Jack
Kavelaars, J. J.
Krupiarz, Chris
Kuhn, Jimmy
McKinnon, William
Nair, Hari
Napolillo, David
Pineau, Jon
Radebaugh, Jani
Sholder, Rachel
Spencer, John
Thodey, Adam
Walters, Samantha
Williams, Bruce
Wilson, Robert J.
Young, Leslie A.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Persephone is a NASA concept mission study that addresses key questions raised by New Horizons' encounters with Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs), with arguably the most important being "Does Pluto have a subsurface ocean?". More broadly, Persephone would answer four significant science questions: (1) What are the internal structures of Pluto and Charon? (2) How have the surfaces and atmospheres in the Pluto system evolved? (3) How has the KBO population evolved? (4) What are the particles and magnetic field environments of the Kuiper Belt? To answer these questions, Persephone has a comprehensive payload, and would both orbit within the Pluto system and encounter other KBOs. The nominal mission is 30.7 years long, with launch in 2031 on a Space Launch System (SLS) Block 2 rocket with a Centaur kick stage, followed by a 27.6 year cruise powered by existing radioisotope electric propulsion (REP) and a Jupiter gravity assist to reach Pluto in 2058. En route to Pluto, Persephone would have one 50- to 100-km-class KBO encounter before starting a 3.1 Earth-year orbital campaign of the Pluto system. The mission also includes the potential for an 8-year extended mission, which would enable the exploration of another KBO in the 100- to 150-km-size class. The mission payload includes 11 instruments: Panchromatic and Color High-Resolution Imager; Low-Light Camera; Ultra-Violet Spectrometer; Near-Infrared (IR) Spectrometer; Thermal IR Camera; Radio Frequency Spectrometer; Mass Spectrometer; Altimeter; Sounding Radar; Magnetometer; and Plasma Spectrometer. The nominal cost of this mission is $3.0B, making it a large strategic science mission.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97563ffa9045306f867111cdc8a63f1f