Europa Clipper: Exploring Jupiter’s Ocean Moon (Mission Overview)
NASA’s Europa Clipper is the first mission dedicated to studying Jupiter’s icy moon Europa, one of the most promising places in our solar system to find an environment suitable for life outside of Earth. Evidence suggests that beneath Europa’s frozen surface is a global ocean of water, and scientists want to find out if there’s also the right chemistry and energy to sustain life.
Europa Clipper is equipped with nine instruments and a gravity experiment. It will orbit Jupiter and make 49 flybys of Europa, gathering data to help scientists understand the moon’s geology, composition, and interior. While not a life-detection mission, Europa Clipper will answer key questions about the moon’s potential habitability.
Europa Clipper is expected to launch in October 2024 from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida and arrive at Jupiter in 2030.
For more information on the mission go to: https://europa.nasa.gov/
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/KSC/APL
Transcript
Dipak Srinavasan, Europa Clipper Telecomms System Engineer
The most exciting thing about Europa can be summarized in one word: water. Now think about all the water on Earth and double that. That's what we think is on Europa.
Bob Pappalardo, Europa Clipper Project Scientist
We need to go there to explore it, to understand, is this place a habitable environment that could potentially support life?
Jordan Evans, Europa Clipper Project Manager
But getting close to Europa is a huge challenge. It sits in the worst possible radiation environment, trapped by Jupiter.
JOURNEY TO EUROPA: JUPITER’S ICY MOON
Bob Pappalardo
Europa is a moon of Jupiter, about the size of Earth's moon, which has an icy surface that probably hides a subsurface ocean.
Tracy Drain, Launch to Mars Mission Manager
Scientists think Europa has the key ingredients to support life as we know it. No. 1: water. No. 2: energy. And 3: essential chemical building blocks. For the first time ever, we're sending a spacecraft completely dedicated to studying this moon.
Jordan Evans
The three main things that we're going to explore at Europa are the ice and ocean, and understand the intersection between the two. Study the chemical composition of the moon, as well as the geology and whether it's active currently.
Bob Pappalardo
Europa Clipper is not specifically a life-search mission. We're going to understand the potential habitability of Europa.
The spacecraft has nine instruments and a gravity science investigation. Five of the instruments are called remote-sensing instruments because they measure light reflected off Europa, like a camera or a spectrometer. The other four instruments are measuring the environment around them, like sniffing gasses or dust.
Jordan Evans
Europa Clipper is the largest spacecraft NASA has ever built for a planetary mission.
Tracy Drain
It weighs 13,000 pounds — six and a half tons. That's like the size of a huge African elephant.
Jordan Evans
And the solar arrays are massive. If you put the solar arrays at the toes of the Statue of Liberty, the other end of the arrays would come up to the Statue of Liberty’s crown.
Dipak Srinavasan
So not only are they big, these things are technological marvels. They are being bathed in radiation all the time, and they have to survive the entire mission like that.
Jordan Evans
Jupiter’s radiation environment is intense. And Europa sits in the worst part of that environment.
Bob Pappalardo
Jupiter acts like a giant particle accelerator. There are charged particles trapped in Jupiter's magnetosphere that rotate with it. And these particles slam against Europa and will slam into our spacecraft as well.
Tracy Drain
We protect the spacecraft in two ways. No. 1, we try to minimize the amount of time we spend in there, which is why we are orbiting Jupiter and just flying by Europa. The second way we protect against the radiation is by having an electronics vault that we put our computer and some of the other sensitive electronics inside, which is made up about a third of an inch of aluminum.
Jordan Evans
With each flyby of Europa, the outside of the spacecraft sees the equivalent of a few million chest X-rays, just as we’re flying by.
Dipak Srinavasan
It's a pretty long trip to get to Jupiter from Earth, but not that bad from a planetary standpoint.
Bob Pappalardo
From launch to the time we get to Jupiter is about 5 ½ years. And along the way, we have a flyby of Mars and then another flyby of Earth to get gravity assists to slingshot the spacecraft out to Jupiter.
Tracy Drain
I hope that for the future explorers who are watching this at home, that they take away from this, that humanity, when we come together, can achieve really cool things.
Bob Pappalardo
This mission has been a long time coming, and we're so excited about what we're going to see when we get there.
Dipak Srinavasan
We are in a golden age of robotic space flight exploration. How could you not be excited about something as monumental as this?
Jordan Evans
I am most excited about the potential to unlock the secrets of Europa, the potential to really understand this crazy world that exists and has likely existed in this condition for 4 billion years.