Mashable 2024年10月15日
SpaceX just launched a huge NASA craft. It's headed to an ocean world.
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美国宇航局(NASA)的木卫二探测器(Europa Clipper)于2023年10月14日成功发射,它将进行约50次近距离飞越木卫二,并试图找到这颗木星卫星上可能存在的生命的迹象。这个探测器是NASA迄今为止为行星科学任务建造的最大探测器,它配备了先进的仪器,可以探测木卫二冰层下的海洋,并寻找生命所需的化学成分。木卫二被认为是太阳系中除地球之外最有可能存在生命的星球之一,探测器的发射标志着人类探索宇宙生命的又一重要里程碑。

🚀 木卫二探测器(Europa Clipper)是NASA迄今为止为行星科学任务建造的最大探测器,它长约100英尺(30.5米),配备了先进的仪器,包括冰层穿透雷达、表面尘埃分析仪等,旨在探测木卫二冰层下的海洋,寻找生命存在的迹象。

👀 木卫二探测器采用巨大的太阳能电池板来获取能量,因为木星区域接收到的阳光只有地球的3%到4%。探测器还配备了电池,可以为各种仪器提供能量,确保探测任务的顺利进行。

💧 科学家认为,木卫二的冰层下可能存在一个巨大的海洋,其体积可能比地球上所有海洋的总和还要大。这个海洋可能是由木卫二受到木星引力的拉伸和挤压产生的热量所融化的,并可能提供了生命存在的条件。

🔬 木卫二探测器将进行约50次近距离飞越木卫二,并利用各种仪器收集数据,例如,冰层穿透雷达可以探测木卫二冰层下的海洋,表面尘埃分析仪可以收集木卫二表面被微流星体喷射到太空中的物质,这些数据将帮助科学家们确定木卫二是否具备生命存在的条件。

🧬 科学家们希望通过木卫二探测器,找到关于生命存在的一些关键问题答案,例如,木卫二的海洋是否提供了生命所需的能量来源?是否拥有生命所需的化学成分?是否拥有一个稳定的环境,让生命得以演化和持续存在?

A NASA probe, the length of a basketball court, is headed to the tantalizing world Europa.

The Europa Clipper craft successfully launched from Kennedy Space Center atop a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket at 12:06 p.m. ET on Oct. 14, with no anomalies reported at time of publishing. The mission is long-anticipated: Planetary scientists are confident this moon of Jupiter harbors a deep ocean. A looming question is whether it hosts the ingredients and conditions to support life. With around 50 close flybys of the planet, the sizable craft — the largest probe NASA has ever built for a planetary science mission — intends to find Europa's answer.

"It's perhaps one of the best places beyond Earth to look for life in our solar system," Cynthia Phillips, a NASA planetary geologist and project staff scientist for the space agency's Europa Clipper mission, told Mashable.

If NASA finds that Europa is a habitable world, a second Europa mission will return, this time landing there to see if it's inhabited.

A graphic comparing the size of the Europa Clipper spacecraft to a basketball court. Credit: NASA

Why the Europa Clipper spacecraft is so big

Europa Clipper, over 100 feet (30.5 meters) long, is big because it needs to generate solar power in deep space. And the Jupiter region only receives three to four percent of the sunlight that Earth receives. Hence the long wings, or arrays.

"You just need these giant solar arrays in order to power all your instruments," Phillips explained. "We're talking about a huge expanse of solar arrays."

Capturing loads of the distant sunlight will create some 700 watts of electricity, which is "about what a small microwave oven or a coffee maker needs to operate," NASA explains. But the craft also carries batteries to help power a host of moon-sleuthing instruments.

"I'm really excited about this payload that we're bringing to Europa," Phillips said.

"I'm really excited about this payload that we're bringing to Europa."

An ice-penetrating radar will look beneath the moon's icy, cracked crust. It will see how this icy subsurface is composed, and possibly, possibly, detect where the ice meets the ocean. (Europa's ice shell is likely some 10 to 15 miles, or 15 to 25 kilometers, thick.) This radar could detect about half a mile deep, or it could be much more — that depends on how fractured the ice is and the purity of the ice (a fractured subsurface, for example, means the radar signal will bounce around more, as opposed to penetrating down). There's potential, however, that the radar will infiltrate a whopping 19 miles (30 kilometers) down.

One of Europa Clipper's wings extended at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Credit: NASA
The Europa Clipper's SUrface Dust Analyzer, or SUDA, which will scoop up particles blasted into space around the moon. Credit: NASA / CU Boulder / Glenn Asakawa

In addition to a suite of specialized cameras, Europa Clipper also carries an instrument called the SUrface Dust Analyzer, or SUDA, that will literally sample particles of Europa that have been ejected into space by tiny meteorites. "Micrometeorites constantly blast fragments of Europa’s surface into space," NASA explains. "The ejecta are individually small, but scientists estimate that half a ton (about 500 kilograms) of Europa’s surface material floats above the moon at all times."

One of the most exciting opportunities of the mission — though far from guaranteed — is the craft potentially flying through a water-ice plume blasted out from Europa's surface. This would allow the instruments exquisite insight into Europa's interior.

"We would love to fly through a plume," Curt Niebur, Europa Clipper's program scientist, said at a press conference leading up to the mission's launch.

"We would love to fly through a plume."

Plumes or not, mission scientists believe that some 50 close flybys of the surface will provide ample observations to prove whether or not Europa could harbor life. Sure, it almost certainly has water. But all life needs energy: Does this ocean world provide an energy source? And does it harbor the basic chemical ingredients, like carbon, to form the building blocks of life as we know it?

And, if all those conditions are satisfied, is there evidence the ocean has been around for billions of years, providing a stable environment for life to evolve and sustain itself in Europa's dark sea?

Why scientists think Europa has an ocean

The Europa Clipper mission is an expensive science endeavor, costing some $5 billion. But NASA suspects this Jovian moon harbors an intriguing sea perhaps twice the volume of all Earth's seas.

Why?

"It's a great detective story," Phillips said.

"It's a great detective story."

In 1979, the Voyager 2 spacecraft captured the first detailed views of Europa, showing a surface dominated by crisscrossing cracks. And many of these lines were reddish, suggesting that something below the surface welled up to fill them. Planetary scientists also knew that as Europa swings by the gravitationally powerful gas giant Jupiter, its interior gets stretched and pulled, a process that produces heat on a world. This tugging could have provided heat on Europa for billions of years.

"This made Europa really, really interesting," Phillips noted.

An artist's conception of the ocean, and geothermal energy sources, that could exist beneath Europa's thick ice crust. Credit: NASA
Europa's surface as captured by NASA's Galileo spacecraft. Credit: NASA

Then, in the 1990s, NASA's Galileo mission captured legendary views of Europa's chaotic, ridged surface — suggesting there was water near the top. What's more, the spacecraft detected a strong magnetic signal from the moon. Saltwater, a really good magnetic conductor, could have provided this signal.

"Galileo showed Europa was even more interesting than suspected," Phillip said.

"It's a great detective story."

The evidence only mounted. On multiple occasions, the Hubble Space Telescope spotted evidence that plumes of water erupted 125 miles (200 kilometers) above Europa's surface. It all added up. "There is very likely a subsurface ocean on Europa," Phillips said.

And if it's remained somewhat stable for many eons, it could harbor conditions suitable for life to develop. We won't know, until we get there in 2030.

"This is a voyage into the unknown," said Nicola Fox, who heads NASA's Science Mission Directorate.

This story has been updated with information about the launch of the Europa Clipper spacecraft.

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