Catches, Comets and Europa

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2024-10-15 17:00:06

If the public seems more interested in spaceflight as a vehicle for streaming TV dramas, the reality of both the Europa Clipper liftoff and the astounding ‘catch’ of SpaceX’s Starship booster may kindle a bit more interest in exploring nearby space. When I say ‘nearby,’ bear in mind that on this site the term refers to the entire Solar System, as we routinely discuss technologies that may one day make travel to far more distant targets possible. But to get there, we need public engagement, and who could fail to be thrilled by a returning space booster landing as if in a 1950’s SF movie?

Europa may itself offer another boost if Europa Clipper’s science return is anything like what it promises to be. Closing to 15 kilometers from the surface and making 49 passes over the icy ocean world, the spacecraft may give us further evidence that outer system moons can be venues for life. We also have the European Space Agency’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE), which will study Europa, Callisto and, in a spectacular move, end up orbiting Ganymede for extended close-up observations.

JUICE gets to Jupiter in July of 2031, while Europa Clipper starts its flybys in the same year, though arriving in 2030. As a measure of how tricky it can be to get to these destinations, both craft make flybys of other worlds, returning in fact to the Earth for some of these. Europa Clipper’s journey will be marked by gravity assists from Mars in February of 2025 and Earth in December 2026. JUICE has already performed one Earth/Moon flyby and will make a flyby of Venus (August, 2025) followed by two Earth flybys (September 2026 and January 2029). A long and winding road indeed!

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