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EI2GYB > ASTRO    26.08.21 13:02l 163 Lines 8252 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: NASA to return to Venus with two missions by 2030
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Sent: 210826/1159Z 13616@EI2GYB.DGL.IRL.EURO BPQ6.0.22

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 NASA to return to Venus with two missions by 2030

The two robotic explorers will be NASA's first to voyage to Venus in 
nearly 30 years.



After neglecting our sister planet for almost three decades, NASA is heading 
back to Venus - and in a big way.

On Wednesday, June 2, NASA administrator Bill Nelson announced that the 
agency would send two new missions to Earth's inner neighbor by 2030. 
One of them, DAVINCI+, is an atmospheric probe that will free fall to 
Venus' surface, sampling its acidic clouds and snapping closeups of its 
terrain. The other, VERITAS, will study the planet from orbit with 
state-of-the-art radar and imaging instruments.

The news thrilled many in the planetary science community who have been 
clamoring for decades for NASA to return to Venus. 
The last NASA mission to target Earth's sister planet was the Magellan 
probe, which orbited Venus from 1990 to 1994. 
Although the hellish world often serves as a flyby waypoint for spacecraft 
seeking a gravitational slingshot to more distant locales, its only 
dedicated visitors in the last 27 years have been ESA's Venus Express 
and Japan's Akatsuki (or "Dawn").

Both DAVINCI+ and VERITAS were competing in a pool of four proposals 
under NASA's program of low-budget ($500 million) Discovery-class missions. 
NASA had said it would approve up to two proposals, and one Venus 
mission was widely expected to make the cut. But NASA's decision to 
double down on Venus came as a surprise.

"Everyone hoped that one of the two slots would be a Venus mission," says 
Justin Filiberto, who is a member of the DAVINCI+ team and a geochemist 
at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston. "But this is incredible 
because it makes a mini Venus exploration program."

The two proposals that missed out were the Io Volcano Observer, 
which would have studied Jupiter's volcanically active moon Io, and 
Trident, which would explored Neptune's icy moon Triton.

DAVINCI+ is short for Deep Atmosphere Venus Investigation of Noble gases, 
Chemistry, and Imaging; the plus sign was added when the mission's proposal 
was revised and enhanced in 2019. VERITAS' full name is Venus Emissivity, 
Radio Science, InSAR, Topography & Spectroscopy.

Complementary craft
===================
While Venus has long taken a backseat to Mars in planetary exploration, 
over the past few decades, scientists have come to realize that the 
landscape that lies beneath Venus' perpetual layer of clouds could once 
have been similar to Earth's - and perhaps even supported life. 
A major objective of the two new missions will be to understand why these 
planets diverged.


When DAVINCI+ hits the venusian cloud tops, it will become the first 
NASA mission to study Venus' atmosphere since 1978, and the first from 
any nation since the USSR's Vega missions in 1985. 
Its ability to directly sample its surroundings means DAVINCI+ will be 
able to put together a 
complete profile of Venus' atmosphere, layer by layer. 
It will also be able to sniff out interesting compounds - perhaps even 
phosphine, which was detected by radio astronomers last year, to much fanfare. 
On Earth, phosphine is produced by microbes, which lead the team to float 
the possibility that the venusian clouds could harbor life; after 
a data processing error was found, the team revised its estimate of 
phosphine levels downward, which opens the door to other interesting 
geochemical processes.

Although DAVINCI+ is not designed to survive its planned hard landing 
on the surface of Venus, nor the sweltering conditions it will encounter 
there, it will return images of the terrain taken below the cloud deck 
during its descent. Scientists hope to learn whether the region's rocks 
are made of continental granite or volcanic basalt. 
"The big difference there is that if there is granite, then that means 
there was water in the interior of Venus - whereas if it was ancient 
basalt, then there doesn't necessarily have to be water," says Filiberto. 
"So that tells a very different story about habitability."

VERITAS will likewise try to piece together Venus' geological evolution 
from orbit. "Determining whether Venus is actively undergoing volcanic 
activity and understanding what process is driving it is one of the really 
exciting questions I'd love to see answered," said Jennifer Whitten, 
a VERITAS team member and planetary scientist at Tulane University in 
New Orleans, in a 2020 press release. It's possible that it will observe 
changes in volcanoes and their lava flows since Magellan and Venus 
Express visited, says Filiberto.


Part of what makes scientists so excited is that the capabilities of the 
two spacecraft are highly complementary. 
"We have such different spatial resolution of our datasets," says Filiberto. 
"DAVINCI+ is going to be able to see these ancient rocks in higher 
resolution than VERITAS, but VERITAS is going to have global coverage, 
so they're going to able to put our pinpoint into context."

There also could be more craft joining the party soon. Later this month, 
ESA will select between two proposals for its next medium-sized 
mission - one of which, EnVision, is another Venus orbiter. 
Plus, Russia and India are separately planning their own Venus missions.

"Venus might get crowded in the next decade," says Filiberto.

Biden's NASA takes shape
========================
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson made the announcement during a 
"State of NASA" address, his most expansive statement on the space 
agency's agenda since he was nominated by President Joe Biden earlier 
this year and sworn in by Vice President Kamala Harris on May 3. 
For the most part, that agenda continues the direction set by his 
predecessor, Jim Bridenstine, under the Trump administration. 
Nelson, 78, is a former Democratic U.S. senator from Florida and flew 
on the space shuttle Columbia in 1986 as a congressman.

In the Senate, Nelson was a vocal proponent of NASA's Space Launch 
System (SLS), which is the launcher, derived from the space shuttle, 
that will send astronauts back to the Moon under the Artemis program. 
Though SLS has suffered numerous delays and is over budget, Nelson's 

nomination was a signal that the Biden administration would not abandon 
the launch system for a commercial alternative. In his speech, Nelson 
praised the program and reaffirmed NASA's commitment to landing the 
first woman and the first person of color on the Moon.

One notable shift for NASA is a renewed emphasis on Earth science as 
part of Biden's climate agenda. 
Nelson led his speech by discussing NASA's Earth System Observatory, 
an ambitious initiative announced last week that aims to design and 
fly a set of satellites devoted to comprehensively monitoring Earth's changes. 
Nelson also gave a personal anecdote of his time in space, referencing 
the "overview effect" that astronauts have reported, where they obtain 
a newfound appreciation for both the planet's beauty and fragility.

The only big piece of news from Nelson's speech was the selection 
of DAVINCI+ and VERITAS, which he saved for last and announced with 
a prepared video - a moment of elation for the chosen science teams. 
"When the video came on, I thought it was like watching the Oscars," 
with a montage of all of the nominees, says Filiberto. "It took me a 
while to realize they were showing both of the winners."






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