JUICE GROUND CONTROL GETS GREEN LIGHT TO START DEVELOPMENT OF JUPITER OPERATIONS
ESA's Jupiter Icy Moons
Explorer – JUICE – passed an important milestone, the ground segment
requirements review, with flying colours, demonstrating that the teams are on track
in the preparation of the spacecraft operations needed to achieve the mission's
ambitious science goals.
Planned to launch in 2022,
JUICE will embark on a 7.5-year long journey through the Solar System before
arriving at Jupiter in 2029. There, it will spend three and a half years
examining the giant planet and its environment, in particular investigating the
Galilean moons Ganymede, Europa and Callisto, which are thought to conceal
oceans of liquid water beneath their icy crusts.
To explore the atmosphere,
magnetosphere and tenuous rings of Jupiter, as well as to characterise its
three ocean-bearing moons, JUICE will sport ten state-of-the-art instruments.
These include cameras, spectrometers, a sub-millimetre sounder, an
ice-penetrating radar, an altimeter, a radio-science experiment, and sensors to
monitor the magnetic fields and particle environment, as well as a radio
interferometry experiment.
After confirmation
of the spacecraft design and
the first
tests on individual pieces of the equipment, the mission has now
gone through another important step, successfully showing that the ground teams
that will operate JUICE and its suite of science instruments meet all the
necessary requirements.
While space missions operate
beyond the realm of our planet, the bulk of the work is actually conducted by
engineers and scientists on Earth – the ground segment – who plan the
activities, monitor, command and communicate with spacecraft so that they point
in the desired directions to gather the data needed by the scientific
community.
ESA's contribution to the
ground segment of JUICE consists of the Mission Operations Centre (MOC), which
is based at the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt, Germany,
and also includes the ground stations and communications network; and the
Science Operations Centre (SOC), based at the European Space Astronomy Centre
(ESAC) near Madrid, Spain.
The ground segment
requirements review, with the aim of assessing the overall implementation and
progress of both the MOC and SOC, was completed on 13 December 2017.
"With this successful review, we
confirmed that the JUICE ground segment is on track to deliver the great
science expected by the community," says Olivier Witasse, ESA
JUICE project scientist.
As is the case for other
missions, the MOC is responsible for commanding the spacecraft, monitoring its
health and returning the data. Besides that, it is also in charge of a series
of mission-specific functions, such as calculating the complex trajectory that
will take JUICE to Jupiter, which includes five planetary gravity assist
manoeuvres at Venus, Earth and Mars, as well as preparing for the spacecraft
operations in the Jovian system, involving 26 flybys of Ganymede, Europa and
Callisto, and eventually orbit injection around Ganymede.
The SOC is instead
responsible for planning the science observations to be conducted with the ten
instruments on-board of JUICE to maximise the scientific return of the mission.
This entails the scheduling of spacecraft pointing to the various observation
targets – Jupiter, the moons, the plasma environment, the magnetic field – and
of the different operating modes to be employed by each instrument.
The review board verified
that the mission requirements for the ground segment, including operations of
both the spacecraft and payload, are fully met. Special attention was dedicated
to the specific needs of the instruments that are part of JUICE's payload
relevant to all phases of mission operations, from calibration measurements
during the long cruise phase to the challenging operations in the Jupiter
system.
As part of the review, the
mission concept and the ground segment design were also addressed, as well as
all details pertaining the organisation of work, from procurement to scheduling
and overall management, making sure that potential critical areas have been
identified and appropriate risk-mitigation measures have been defined.
After the successful review,
the JUICE MOC and SOC will now proceed to the next phase, designing their
respective implementation; a further review of the ground segment design is
planned for the end of 2018.
"This year will be very crucial for
the JUICE programme, with three key milestone to come: a Sun illumination test
in April, which will simulate the conditions of the Venus fly-by on the
full-scale thermal model of the spacecraft; the start of the engineering model
test campaign in mid-2018; and the kick-off of the critical design review at
the end of the year," says Giuseppe Sarri, ESA JUICE project
manager.
"So far all preparation activities
are running as expected, in line with the planned launch date on 20 May 2022." Original article by sci.esa.int
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