Tiger: concept study for a new frontiers Enceladus habitability mission
Tiger: concept study for a new frontiers Enceladus habitability mission
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Date
2021-09-17
Authors
Spiers, Elizabeth M.
Weber, Jessica M.
Venigalla, Chandrakanth
Annex, Andrew M.
Chen, Christine P.
Lee, Carina
Gray, Patrick Clifton
McIntyre, Kathleen J.
Berdis, Jodi R.
Mogan, Shane R. Carberry
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IOP
Abstract
Herein we introduce Tiger, a mission concept developed during the 2020 Planetary Science Summer School at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Tiger is a flyby mission that would help further constrain the habitability of Enceladus through two science objectives: (1) determine whether Enceladus's volatile inventory undergoes synthesis of complex organic species that are evidence for a habitable ocean, and (2) determine whether Enceladus's plume material is supplied directly from the ocean or if it interfaces with other reservoirs within the ice shell. To address the science goals in a total of eight flybys, Tiger would carry a four-instrument payload, including a mass spectrometer, a single-band ice-penetrating radar, an ultraviolet imaging spectrograph, and an imaging camera. We discuss Tiger's instrument and mission architecture, as well as the trades and challenges associated with a habitability-focused New Frontiers–class flyby mission to Enceladus.
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Keywords
Enceladus (Satellite)