Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

NNadir

(34,664 posts)
Fri May 5, 2023, 04:14 PM May 2023

Hard feelings over mission change for NASA's Pluto spacecraft.

Last edited Fri May 5, 2023, 05:28 PM - Edit history (1)

This is a news item in the most recent issue of Nature:

Hard feelings over mission change for NASA’s Pluto spacecraft

Subtitle:

US space agency plans to shift the New Horizons planetary probe to studying heliophysics, and some scientists don’t agree.


I'm not sure if it's open sourced, so some excerpts:

n the distant reaches of the Solar System, more than 8 billion kilometres from Earth, NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft is at the centre of a dispute over its future.


Pluto’s geology is unlike any other

The craft, which snapped stunning images during humanity’s first visit to Pluto in 2015, is within a few years of exiting the Kuiper belt, the realm of frozen objects that orbit the Sun beyond Neptune. In addition to Pluto, it has flown past another Kuiper belt object called Arrokoth, but has not found a third object to visit before it leaves. So NASA now plans to repurpose the spacecraft mainly as a heliophysics mission, to study space weather and other phenomena that it can measure from its unique location in the Solar System.

But some are unhappy with the decision, and worry that planetary studies are being truncated too soon. “Scientifically, I just don’t feel that we’re at diminishing returns yet,” says Kelsi Singer, the mission’s project scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado.

Shifting New Horizons from being a planetary explorer to an interstellar emissary echoes what the agency did with the twin Voyager spacecraft after they visited the outer planets in the 1980s. “We have this perfectly working spacecraft that’s in a unique area,” says Nicola Fox, head of NASA’s science mission directorate in Washington DC. The agency wants to get the “best use” out of it, she says, as well as “open it up to as many scientists from as many disciplines as are interested”.

A mission takeover?

No one disputes that New Horizons has made stunning discoveries in the Kuiper belt, which contains debris left over from the Solar System’s early history. The spacecraft has uncovered secrets of Pluto’s icy surface and revealed more about how the building blocks of planets might have come together. Its 2019 fly-by of Arrokoth, a 35-kilometre-long Kuiper belt object made of two chunks of stuck-together space rock, “taught us so much about fundamental properties of planetary formation — completely transformational”, says Michele Bannister, a planetary scientist at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand...





...Without another Kuiper belt object to fly by, the planetary science for New Horizons becomes harder to justify, some say. Tensions arose last year after NASA’s planetary science division conducted a ‘senior review’ of its operational missions, as it does every few years. A panel of scientists evaluated eight missions, including New Horizons, for their recent scientific performance and future promise.

That review rated New Horizons’ current science as “excellent/very good” if planetary science, astrophysics and heliophysics were all included. The rating slid to “very good/good” for planetary science alone, in part because the science team’s proposed studies of Kuiper belt objects were “unlikely to dramatically improve the state of knowledge”, the review said. (The mission’s science team disputes that conclusion.)...

...Now the question is what science can still be done with New Horizons, and how. Although its plutonium power source is waning with time, it has enough to last probably another quarter of a century.

...The craft is currently in the outer part of the Kuiper belt (see ‘Out there’), about which little is known because it can’t be observed well from Earth. “New Horizons is in a very unique position, and there’s basically no other way to get this information,” Singer says...

... Both also said that if a Kuiper belt object were found that New Horizons could reach, NASA would be open to discussing that, even if the mission had already been shifted to heliophysics. Stern and his team continue to look for a fly-by target in the time they have left...
1 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Hard feelings over mission change for NASA's Pluto spacecraft. (Original Post) NNadir May 2023 OP
K & R...nt Wounded Bear May 2023 #1
Latest Discussions»Culture Forums»Science»Hard feelings over missio...