Monday, May 7, 2012

Multiple small missions as a pathway to mars sample return

This is the abstract I am submitting to the Mars Exploration Conference. I hope it mirrors what many people have thought, and stimulates some good discussion:

Introduction: Recent discoveries by the Mars Exploration Rovers, Mars Express, Mars Odyssey, and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft include multiple, tantalizing astrobiological targets from both past and present day Mars. The most desirable path to Mars Sample Return (MSR) should be an attempt to visit as many of these sites as possible to find the site most likely to provide the highest impact returned samples. Here we propose an MSR architecture where the first step (potentially flown in the 2018 opportunity) would entail a series of smaller caching missions to multiple landing sites on the Martian surface instead of one large flagship-class sample caching mission to a single site (Fig. 1). Such an architecture would preserve a direct pathway to MSR as stipulated by the recent Planetary Decadal Survey [1] and permits investigation of diverse scientific questions while simultaneously complying with the budgetary constraints that are likely to exist during this next decade.

The proposed series of missions would be flown at every launch opportunity from 2018 until 2028 to find and identify samples for MSR. These five launch opportunities would allow for 5-10 smaller MER-class rovers to be sent to multiple landing sites on Mars to explore the major discoveries of gullies, sulfates, phyllosilicates, carbonates, and chlorides from potential high interest regions such as Valles Marineris, Mawrth Vallis, and Nili Fossae. In addition, 1-2 telecom and science capable orbiters would also need to be launched to maintain the communication infrastructure and continue high resolution remote sensing of the surface. The landers would share a common EDL system, mobility platform, and rover chassis to increase efficiency and control costs. The rover design would allow for modular or customizable competed science instrument packages (including the sample caching system) necessary to characterize the environment and identify potential high value samples at a given landing site. There are 8 reasons why a multiple mission approach to the identification and collection of a suitable sample would be more desirable than a single flagship sample caching mission:

 1. Scientific Return: Many of the major questions about Mars that have been raised during the past ~5 decades of Mars exploration [2] remain unanswered such as: how much warmer and wetter was Early Mars? When did this clement period occur and how long did it last? How did impacts and volcanism perturb early terrestrial planetary environments? Does the modern climate of Mars permit liquid water for life? Modern water seepages have been proposed and discoveries of sulfates, phyllosilicates, carbonates, and chloride salts made from orbit point to geographic and temporal diversity of past habitable Martian environments. Discerning environmental conditions and their relevance to life requires landed missions to establish an historical and geological context which has been shown to be difficult to do with orbital data. While we know enough now about Mars to return scientifically interesting samples, it is unknown whether they will offer breakthrough discoveries. Multiple precursor missions exploring multiple exciting landing sites will substantially increase the probability for breakthrough MSR.

2. Breakthrough Discoveries: Landed missions provide the highest potential for breakthrough discoveries such as identification of organic material, detection of a biosignature, and/or the discovery of something unpredictable. These details simply cannot be discerned from orbit. The effects of a breakthrough discovery are difficult to predict, but could result in increased budgetary support for the Mars program (as evidenced by the discoveries surrounding ALH 84001) as well as a strong public, scientific, and political support for further investigation. Future breakthroughs could even ignite the nation’s interest in human exploration missions to Mars.

3. Programmatic Risk Mitigation: Because of high costs for each component, a weakness in the current MSR mission architecture is that a single mission failure would endanger the entire program. The program is especially vulnerable in the initial stages where a sample has yet to be identified. Multiple missions provide redundancy, the capability of recovering from a mission failure, and building technical expertise. This redundancy could also loosen the lander safety requirements and open up a larger portion of the Martian surface to exploration.  

4. Synergy with Human Exploration: There is a wide range of objectives that need to be addressed by Mars surface missions as a precursor to human exploration. These do not often have high enough science priority to be included as SMD mission objectives because there are few opportunities for landed missions available. However, the large number of missions in this program could allow for synergistic investigations and/or missions to be conducted with HEOMD to landing sites important for accomplishing exploration objectives [2]. The scalability of the multiple mission approach would also allow this program to potentially take advantage of HEOMD resources (if available), such as launches of several spacecraft on the SLS rocket.

5. Budgetary Flexibility: Although multiple small missions may be more expensive to implement in aggregate than a single sample caching flagship mission on a decadal scale, the large cost and complexity of a flagship sample caching rover makes implementation very difficult (or impossible in the current budget) due to phasing and high demands on single year budgets. Thus a more sustainable program of smaller missions would provide substantial budget flexibility, spreading the costs over time and helping shield the overall planetary program from MSR budgetary pressures. This approach also offers a return to NASA's earlier successful philosophy of multiple missions to common targets (Mariner, Viking, Voyager, etc.). The scalability of this model will also allow the program to expand during periods of higher budget availability by simply adding additional missions. We argue that the economies of scale and flexibility realized from the small, multiple mission approach are vital to accomplishing the goals of NASA’s Mars exploration efforts.

6. Cost Risk: The multiple mission approach would substantially drive down risks of going over budget since each mission would utilize many of the same systems and technology. This reduces the amount of development and testing required, while also reducing the amount of risk by utilizing proven spacecraft and operations systems. Furthermore the commonality of many of the spacecraft components would improve the reliability of cost models, driving down unpredictability, permitting greater cost control, and providing a stable platform for instrument developers.

7. International Cooperation: This new mission framework for MSR expands the scope of previous exploration and caching efforts allowing for a new alignment of US and European (and perhaps other) international Mars exploration goals. Under this concept, for example, any European spacecraft that explores a high priority site on Mars would be directly contributing to the stated goals of MSR as defined by the Decadal Survey. The same would apply for craft from other spacefaring nations.

8. Technology Development: The establishment of a high-heritage, well tested, and optimized spacecraft design would provide a stable platform to pursue technology development for instruments and system improvements leading toward MSR. The costs and risks incurred by testing new technologies would be mitigated by utilizing them on a well-characterized spacecraft system. The testing of more substantial technologies in preparation for future human exploration would likely fall outside of the MSR architecture described here necessitating additional missions outside of the ones described here.

Direct Pathway to Mars Sample Return: We argue here that the multiple mission approach to sample identification and caching is a more desirable alternative to the single large flagship model and thus provides an alternative MSR architecture. If such an approach can be implemented within available budget constraints, NASA would be able to pursue MSR in conformance with the intent of the Decadal Survey, even if not in the way that had been previously envisioned during the Survey's deliberations.

References: [1] Committee on the Planetary Science Decadal Survey N. R. C. (2011) Vision and Voyages for Planetary Science in the Decade 2013–2022. [2] MEPAG (2010) Mars scientific goals, objectives, investigations, and priorities: 2010.

4 comments:

  1. Hi Paul,

    It goes without saying that I'm a fan of MER missions and would love to see more of them. But I'm also a fan of sample return. It has not been shown that a MER-class rover can be equipped for caching AND the kind of capabilities needed to pick good samples and characterize the landing site. The E2E-iSAG looked at the needed capabilities in excruciating detail, as well as the objectives of sample return. You really should look at the report and cite it in your abstract (http://mepag.jpl.nasa.gov/reports/e2esag.html).

    As originally conceived, the MAX-C rover was intermediate between MER and MSL; just big enough and well equipped enough to get the job done. I don't think a truly MER-class rover can do caching. It was already at the mass limit for an airbag landing system, which you don't discuss in the abstract. Unless you can show that a MER-class rover can be equipped for caching and site characterization and land via airbags, then it's no longer a MER-class mission we're talking about. And the presumed cost savings erode.

    So I think it's unrealistic to suggest that we can send 5-10 MER-class caching rovers over a 10-year period and somehow make this more cost effective than the originally conceived MAX-C rover. Unless I've missed something about your concept, I can't sign on to the abstract.

    That said, I appreciate the motivation behind your efforts to pursue a path forward. But we as the Mars community also need to be mindful that we don't go so far off the rails that we relinquish the top priority status that we currently enjoy from the Decadal Survey. Congress appears poised to reallocate funding to the Outer Planets Flagship if we depart too much from MSR, as determined by the NRC (see http://www.spacefoundation.org/programs/research-and-analysis/whitepapers-and-analysis/update-fy-2013-nasa-budget-comparison).

    Respectfully submitted,

    Steve

    --------------------------------------
    Steven W. Ruff, PhD
    Faculty Research Associate
    Mars Space Flight Facility
    School of Earth and Space Exploration
    Arizona State University
    Tempe, AZ 85287-6305

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  2. Steve, I would argue that the fundamental assumption that there are many landing sites that would work for sample return should be challenged. The point of the abstract is to say that one (or two I guess) landing site isn't good enough. We've been to six places on Mars, and none of them are real sample return candidates - why should we think that we are going to get it right the next time?

    I think we should have the discussion about whether we would rather have smaller less capable rovers to multiple landing sites or one big capable rover to one landing site.

    I think we should also have the discussion about what really is the minimum set of measurements needed to determine if a sample is worthy of sample return. I think the MER rovers have shown us that it doesn't have to be much more than the Athena Science package.

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  3. Hi Paul,

    Would there be a way to combine a robust exploration program with limited drilling and caching of select samples at the end of the program?

    Also, I think it is critical that we plan to acquire some samples that originate from below the surface alteration zone. On Earth, organic geochemists often try to sample at least a meter into shale outcrops to minimize effects of oxidation, and studies of organic preservation show that organic-rich shales in road cuts become oxidized in less than than 50 years (refs below). However, my understanding of the caching system for MAX-C was that the depth from which cored samples could be derived would have been a few tens of centimeters.

    Chemical precipitates, like chert, probably afford greater protection for internal organics, but chert is extremely hard and it is unclear whether chert could have been cored by MAX-C. Other, softer chemical sediments (such as gypsum or opal) would be easier to core, but their ability to protect internal organics from oxidation on Mars is uncertain.

    Dorothy

    Dr. Dorothy Z. Oehler
    Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science
    NASA- Johnson Space Center
    2101 NASA Parkway
    Houston, TX 77058

    References:

    Van Os, Middelburg, De Lange, 1996. Extensive degradation and fractionation of organic matter during subsurface weathering. Aquatic Geochemistry 1, 303-312.

    Clayton and Swetland, 1978. Subaerial weathering of sedimentary organic matter. Geochim. Cosmochm. Acta 42 (3), 305-312.

    Leythaeuser, 1973. Effects of weathering on organic matter in shales. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 37 (1), 113-120.

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  4. I think that inevitably, a single Max-C type rover will be able to reach only a limited number of terrain types; samples that we desperately wish we had will be left uncollected. I believe that a multiple small mission approach, in addition to being extremely flexible and responsive to evolving opportunities and constraints, is that a suite of potential samples can be evaluated prior to MSR, and the samples most desired by the community at that time can be selected for return. We are currently at the end of an enormous glut of Mars data, and it would not be astonishing to see our idea of the ideal sample suite evolve between now and whatever distant date Max-C could be funded.

    While I am sympathetic to Steve's concern about appearing renegade with respect to the decadal plan, this is only an in-house discussion, and I believe that we should go forward with weighing the risks and benefits within the community. There is a whole ziggurat of bureaucracy between us and Congress, and I feel confident that they remain sufficiently plugged in that they would never go forward with any plan that will draw a hostile response from Congress. Also, the lifetime of a congressional roster is short compared to the timescale needed for these missions, so basing a multi-decade strategy on the current composition of the Congress would be more restrictive than I think we need to be.

    Aaron Zent
    NASA Ames Research Center
    Moffett Field, CA 94035
    Aaron.P.Zent@nasa.gov

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