MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109 TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Contact: Martha J. Heil (818) 354-0850
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 4, 2001
NASA CONSIDERS DISCOVERY MISSION PROPOSALS
It's a difficult decision: With about $300 million to
spend, should NASA buy a spacecraft that could find Earth-
sized planets around nearby stars? What about a mission that
could peer deep inside Jupiter's gaseous atmosphere? Or should
the agency go with a mission to orbit the two largest
asteroids in the solar system?
The answer to that question will have to wait about a
year. In the first step of a two-step process, NASA's Office
of Space Science selected three proposals for detailed study
as candidates for the next mission in the agency's Discovery
Program of lower cost, highly focused, rapid-development
scientific spacecraft.
"The diversity of science represented in these three
mission proposals is outstanding. NASA will have its hands
full picking only one for flight," said Dr. Jay Bergstralh,
acting Director of Solar System Exploration at NASA
Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
The selected proposals were judged to have the best
science value among 26 proposals submitted to NASA last
August. Each selected team will receive $450,000 to conduct a
four-month implementation-feasibility study focused on cost,
management and technical plans, including educational outreach
and small business involvement.
Following detailed mission concept studies, NASA intends
to select one of the three proposals late in 2001 for full
development. The mission should be launched around 2005 or
2006.
NASA has also decided to fund American participation in a
mission to Mars being flown by another nation. In this
"Mission of Opportunity" NASA will contribute to seismology,
meteorology and geodesy (to measure the size and shape of the
planet) experiments on the French-led NetLander Mission,
scheduled for launch in 2007. The Mission of Opportunity team
will receive $250,000 to conduct its feasibility study.
The selected Discovery and Mission of Opportunity
proposals are:
* The Kepler mission is a space telescope specifically
designed to detect Earth-sized planets around stars in the
Sun's neighborhood of the galaxy. By monitoring 100,000 stars
over a four-year mission, Kepler could detect up to 500 Earth-
sized planets and up to 1,000 Jupiter-sized planets. Dr.
William Borucki of NASA's Ames Research Center at Moffet
Field, Calif., would lead Kepler at a total cost to NASA of
$286 million.
* The Interior Structure and Internal Dynamical
Evolution of Jupiter (INSIDE Jupiter) mission is a Jupiter
orbiter designed to observe and measure processes occurring
within the Jovian magnetosphere and atmosphere. INSIDE Jupiter
would determine the internal structure of the planet by
obtaining high-resolution maps of the magnetic and gravity
fields. Dr. Edward J. Smith of NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., would lead INSIDE Jupiter at a
total cost to NASA of $296 million.
* The Dawn mission intends to orbit Vesta and Ceres, two
of the largest asteroids in the solar system. According to
current theories, the very different properties of Vesta and
Ceres are the result of the asteroids being formed and
evolving in different parts of the solar system. By observing
both asteroids with the same set of instruments, Dawn would
probe the early solar system as well as determine in detail
the properties of each asteroid. Dr. Christopher T. Russell of
the University of California at Los Angeles would lead Dawn at
a total cost to NASA of $271 million.
* A U.S. contribution to the French-led NetLander
mission will add unique capabilities to each of the four
landers and the orbiter which comprise the mission. In 2007,
NetLander will create the first science network on Mars to
study the planet's internal structure. The American
contribution includes short period seismometers and wind
sensors on the landers, and a high-resolution geodesy
instrument on the orbiter. Dr. W. Bruce Banerdt of the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory will lead the U.S. contribution to
NetLander at a total cost to NASA of $35 million.
The Discovery Program is designed to provide frequent,
low-cost access to space for planetary missions and missions
to search for planets around other stars. The selected science
missions must be ready for launch before September 30, 2006,
within the Discovery Program's cap on each mission's cost to
NASA of $299 million.
The Discovery Program is managed at JPL, a division of
the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, for NASA's
Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. More information on
the Discovery Program is available at:
http://discovery.nasa.gov/ .
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01-03
MJH