Enabling technologies for planetary exploration

Manuel Grande, Linli Guo, Michel Blanc, Jorge Alves, Advenit Makaya, Sami Asmar, David Atkinson, Anne Bourdon, Pascal Chabert, Steve Chien, John Day, Alberto G. Fairén, Anthony Freeman, Antonio Genova, Alain Herique, Wlodek Kofman, Joseph Lazio, Olivier Mousis, Gian Gabriele Ori, Victor ParroRobert Preston, Jose A. Rodriguez-Manfredi, Veerle J. Sterken, Keith Stephenson, Joshua Vander Hook, J. Hunter Waite, Sonia Zine

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

The primary objective of this chapter is to present an overview of the different key technologies that will be needed in order to fly the technically most challenging of the representative missions identified in Chapter 4 (the Pillar 2 Horizon 2061 report, Lasue et al., 2021). It starts with a description of the future scientific instruments which will address the key questions of Horizon 2061 described in Chapter 3 (the Pillar 1 Horizon 2061 report, Dehant et al., 2021) and the new technologies that the next generations of space instruments will require (Section 2). From there, the chapter follows the line of logical development and implementation of a planetary mission: Section 3 describes some of the novel mission architectures that will be needed and how they will articulate interplanetary spacecraft and science platforms; Section 4 summarizes the system-level technologies needed: power, propulsion, navigation, communication, advanced autonomy on-board planetary spacecraft; Section 5 describes the diversity of specialized science platforms that will be needed to survive, operate, and return scientific data from the extreme environments that future missions will target; Section 6 describes the new technology developments that will be needed for long-duration missions and semipermanent settlements; finally, Section 7 attempts to anticipate some of the disruptive technologies that should emerge and progressively prevail in the decades to come to meet the long-term needs of future planetary missions.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationPlanetary Exploration Horizon 2061
Subtitle of host publicationA Long-Term Perspective for Planetary Exploration
EditorsMichel Blanc
PublisherElsevier
Pages249-329
Number of pages81
ISBN (Electronic)9780323902267
ISBN (Print)9780323902274
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01 Jan 2023

Keywords

  • Disruptive technologies
  • Exploration
  • Instruments
  • Machine learning
  • Missions
  • Planetary exploration
  • Solar system
  • Technology

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