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Comparing NASA Discovery and New Frontiers Class Mission Concepts for the Io Volcano Observer (IVO)

Authors :
Hamilton, Christopher W.
McEwen, Alfred S.
Keszthelyi, Laszlo
Carter, Lynn M.
Davies, Ashley G.
de Kleer, Katherine
Jessup, Kandis Lea
Jia, Xianzhe
Keane, James T.
Mandt, Kathleen
Nimmo, Francis
Paranicas, Chris
Park, Ryan S.
Perry, Jason E.
Pommier, Anne
Radebaugh, Jani
Sutton, Sarah S.
Vorburger, Audrey
Wurz, Peter
Borlina, Cauê
Haapala, Amanda F.
DellaGiustina, Daniella N.
Denevi, Brett W.
Hörst, Sarah M.
Kempf, Sascha
Khurana, Krishan K.
Likar, Justin J.
Masters, Adam
Mousis, Olivier
Polit, Anjani T.
Bhushan, Aditya
Bland, Michael
Matsuyama, Isamu
Spencer, John
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Jupiter's moon Io is a highly compelling target for future exploration that offers critical insight into tidal dissipation processes and the geology of high heat flux worlds, including primitive planetary bodies, such as the early Earth, that are shaped by enhanced rates of volcanism. Io is also important for understanding the development of volcanogenic atmospheres and mass-exchange within the Jupiter System. However, fundamental questions remain about the state of Io's interior, surface, and atmosphere, as well as its role in the evolution of the Galilean satellites. The Io Volcano Observer (IVO) would address these questions by achieving the following three key goals: (A) Determine how and where tidal heat is generated inside Io; (B) Understand how tidal heat is transported to the surface of Io; and (C) Understand how Io is evolving. IVO was selected for Phase A study through the NASA Discovery program in 2020 and, in anticipation of a New Frontiers 5 opportunity, an enhanced IVO-NF mission concept was advanced that would increase the Baseline mission from 10 flybys to 20, with an improved radiation design; employ a Ka-band communications to double IVO's total data downlink; add a wide angle camera for color and stereo mapping; add a dust mass spectrometer; and lower the altitude of later flybys to enable new science. This study compares and contrasts the mission architecture, instrument suite, and science objectives for Discovery (IVO) and New Frontiers (IVO-NF) missions to Io, and advocates for continued prioritization of Io as an exploration target for New Frontiers.<br />Comment: Submitted to The Planetary Science Journal for peer-review on 14 August 2024

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2408.08334
Document Type :
Working Paper