[meteorite-list] MAVEN Set For Launch on Atmospheric Research Mission

Ron Baalke baalke at zagami.jpl.nasa.gov
Sun Nov 17 21:17:52 EST 2013


http://www.spaceflightnow.com/atlas/av038/131117preview/

Mars orbiter set for launch on atmospheric research mission
BY STEPHEN CLARK
SPACEFLIGHT NOW
November 17, 2013

The Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution, or MAVEN, mission carries 
a suite of instruments built by scientists across the United States to 
sample the red planet's upper atmosphere and gauge its composition, dynamics 
and response to a stream of radioactive particles from the sun.

Scientists do not know how Mars transformed from a world with lakes, rivers 
and potential life into a barren planet without any sign of life today.

"We're trying to understand why the climate changed on Mars - why Mars 
appears to have gone from an environment that was habitable, to microorganisms 
at least, to one that is the cold, dry, uninhabitable environment we see 
today," said Bruce Jakosky, MAVEN's principal investigator from the University 
of Colorado at Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics.

Data from ongoing Mars missions, including NASA's Curiosity rover, have 
convinced scientists Mars once had ample moisture and harbored warmer 
temperatures, giving it all the ingredients necessary to support life 
at some point in its 4.6-billion-year history.

"We don't just launch missions to Mars one at a time," said John Grunsfeld, 
head of NASA's science division. "We have an integrated program of Mars 
exploration. We've been following a path of looking for water on Mars, 
looking for current water and past water. We've now confirmed that ... 
We're transitioning into the search for biosignatures, past evidence that 
life could have started on Mars. And we don't have that answer yet. That's 
part of the quest trying to answer, are we alone in the universe, in a 
broader sense."

Despite an onslaught of missions over the past decade-and-a-half, including 
four rovers, a stationary lander, and four orbiters, there is scant evidence 
for how and when Mars lost its thick atmosphere, leaving a thin blanket 
of gas just above the surface.

Scientists posed that question when developing the proposal for the $671 
million MAVEN mission in 2003, Jakosky said.

"One of the big questions has been what happened to the climate? Why did 
it change? What we're trying to do is answer that question of where did 
the water go? Where did the [carbon dioxide] from the early thick atmosphere 
go? There are two places it can go," Jakosky said. "It can go down into 
the crust and be locked up there, or it can go up and be lost to space. 
We have evidence that both of those happened, but we don't see reservoirs 
of [carbon dioxide] in the crust that could explain what happened to the 
early thick atmosphere. We're trying to explain the role of loss to space."

Asked if he felt anxious, nervous or excited on the eve of launch, Jakosky 
replied: "All of the above."

MAVEN is the first mission dedicated to surveying the Martian upper atmosphere, 
and the probe also hosts an Electra radio to join NASA and European orbiters 
providing communications relay between Earth and the rovers on the surface.

"By looking at the nature of the upper atmosphere today, we learn about 
the processes that control the atmopshere, and we're going to have a good 
understanding of what the history of the atmosphere has been," Jakosky 
said.

Fitted with eight instruments, MAVEN is set to blast off from Cape Canaveral, 
Fla., at 1:28 p.m. EST (1828 GMT) Monday aboard a United Launch Alliance 
Atlas 5 rocket.

Powered by a Russian-built RD-180 engine, the Atlas 5 will ascend from 
the Florida coastline, break the sound barrier about 78 seconds into flight 
and rocket into the upper atmosphere in four minutes before releasing 
its kerosene-fueled first stage to fall back into the Atlantic Ocean.

An RL10 engine on the Atlas 5's Centaur upper stage will ignite two times, 
first to put MAVEN in a parking orbit around Earth, then to shoot the 
5,420-pound spacecraft toward Mars. Deployment of MAVEN is expected about 
an hour after launch.

MAVEN is programmed to radio its status to a pair of ground stations in 
Australia moments later, and its two wings of power-generating solar panels 
should be unfurled within 15 minutes of spacecraft separation, according 
to David Mitchell, MAVEN's project manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight 
Center in Maryland.

The solar arrays stretch 37.5 feet tip-to-tip, about the length of a school 
bus. Filled with propellant, MAVEN weighs about the same as a fully-loaded 
SUV, according to NASA.

The trip to Mars will take 10 months, and MAVEN is due to put itself into 
orbit there with a make-or-break 38-minute braking burn scheduled for 
Sept. 22, 2014, assuming the launch occurs as planned Monday. "There's 
quite an interest in this mission," said Omar Baez, NASA's launch director 
for the MAVEN mission. "You wouldn't think so in that it's not as sexy 
as the rovers going over the planet, but this is kind of like a weather 
satellite for mars, and it's providing relay. It's real science."

Several more engine firings next fall will put MAVEN into its operational 
orbit, which will take the probe as close as 93 miles to Mars and as far 
as 3,860 miles, completing lap of the planet every four-and-a-half hours.

"Every orbit, we're dipping down below the altitude from which gas is 
lost, so we sample that column directly on every orbit," Jakosky said.

The probe has to extend several instrument booms once it arrives at Mars, 
allowing MAVEN's sensors to be far enough away from the spacecraft to 
avoid interference and collect pristine measurements. One of the deployable 
platforms holds three instruments, allowing those sensors to pivot and 
point toward Mars while the craft's solar arrays are aimed the sun to 
charge its batteries.

By early November 2014, MAVEN should be ready to begin its science campaign, 
which will last at least one Earth year. MAVEN's science instruments come 
from institutions across the United States and France. Some of the payloads 
will track the sun's influence on Mars.

"Mars is responding in various ways, literally bristling with loss processes," 
said Janet Luhmann, MAVEN's deputy principal investigator from the University 
of California at Berkeley. "MAVEN is instrumented specifically to be able 
to measure what's coming in and what's going out."

Unlike other Mars missions, MAVEN does not carry a camera. As a cost-saving 
measure, Jakosky said he decided to limit MAVEN's expenditures to those 
focused on its prime science mission.

Other sensors will identify the gases, ions and elements making up the 
tenuous outer reaches of the Martian atmosphere.

"This will allow us to estimate over long time periods, on the order of 
billions of years ... how long Mars has been exposed to this loss process 
and, therefore, how much atmosphere has been removed in this way," Luhmann 
said.

One way MAVEN will try to quantify how much of the atmosphere was lost 
to space is measuring concentrations of heavy and lighter isotopes of 
gases. Scientists think Mars should hold a greater number of heavy isotopes 
because lighter atoms would have been easier to strip away with the solar 
wind, a stream of charged particles coming from the sun.

"Over billions and billions of years, you leave more of the heavy stuff 
in the atmosphere," said Paul Mahaffy, lead scientist for one of MAVEN's 
instruments.

"What got me into this were the measurements of isotopes of the noble 
gases in the atmosphere," Jakosky said. "The key one that got me excited 
about this was the ratio of argon-38 to argon-36 because on Mars, it's 
been measured through Martian meteorites and now confirmed with [the Curiosity 
rover], that the ratio of argon-38 to argon-36 is about 20-to-30 percent 
greater than on Earth, and the only thing that can explain that is loss 
to space, so to me that's a direct measurement proving that atmospheric 
loss to space was an important process."

Earth's strong magnetic field makes it more resistant to atmospheric decay 
from the solar wind, but Mars does not have the global magnetism required 
to hold on to air over billions of years.

"We think that escape to space has been responsible for removing a lot 
of gas from the atmosphere, and we designed this mission to try to understand 
how those processes work, and see if we can measure things that will tell 
us how much gas has escaped over time," Jakosky said.

MAVEN will get to Mars just after the peak of the sun's 11-year solar 
cycle, so scientists hope to get a front-row seat on how a strong solar 
wind impacts the planet's atmosphere.

"What we're really getting at is understanding the history of the climate, 
the history of the volatile inventory, and I think the understanding of 
the history of the habitability of Mars by microbes," Jakosky said. "I 
see it as a geology mission, or an astrobiology mission, because that's 
what we're getting at by studying the top of the atmosphere and its interactions 
with the sun." 



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