SETI public: Fw: NASA Selects Explorer Mission Proposals For Feasibility Studies

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Tue Nov 04 2003 - 20:24:31 PST

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Ron Baalke - Galileo Project
    Sent: Tuesday, November 04, 2003 6:09 PM
    To: ljk4_at_msn.com
    Subject: NASA Selects Explorer Mission Proposals For Feasibility Studies

    Dwayne Brown
    Headquarters, Washington November 4, 2003
    (Phone: 202/358-1726)

    RELEASE: 03-353

    NASA SELECTS EXPLORER MISSION PROPOSALS FOR FEASIBILITY
    STUDIES

         NASA recently selected candidate mission proposals that
    would study the universe, from Jupiter and the sun to black
    holes and dark matter. The proposals are candidates for
    missions in NASA's Explorer Program of lower cost, highly
    focused, rapid-development scientific spacecraft.

    Following detailed mission concept studies, NASA intends to
    select two of the mission proposals by fall 2004 for full
    development as Small Explorer (SMEX) missions. The two
    missions developed for flight will be launched in 2007 and
    2008.

    NASA has also decided to fund as a "Mission of Opportunity" a
    balloon-borne experiment to detect high-energy neutrinos,
    ghostly particles that fill the universe.

    "The Small Explorer mission proposals we received show that
    the scientific community has a lot of innovative ideas on
    ways to study some of the most vexing questions in science,
    and to do it on a relatively small budget," said Dr. Ed
    Weiler, associate administrator for space science at NASA
    Headquarters, Washington. "It was difficult to select only a
    few from among the many great proposals we received, but I
    think the selected proposals have a great chance to really
    push back the frontiers of knowledge," he said.

    The selected proposals were judged to have the best science
    value among 36 submitted to NASA in February 2003. Each will
    receive $450,000 ($250,000 for the Mission of Opportunity) to
    conduct a five-month implementation feasibility study. The
    selected SMEX proposals are:

    o The Normal-incidence Extreme Ultraviolet Spectrometer
    (NEXUS): a solar spectrometer with major advances in
    sensitivity and resolution to reveal the cause of coronal
    heating and solar wind acceleration. Joseph M. Davila of
    NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC), Greenbelt, Md.,
    would lead NEXUS at a total mission cost to NASA of $131
    million.

    o The Dark Universe Observatory (DUO): seven X-ray
    telescopes to measure the dark matter and dark energy that
    dominate the content of the universe with 100 times the
    sensitivity of previous X-ray studies. Richard E.
    Griffiths of Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, would
    lead DUO at a total mission cost to NASA of $132 million.

    o The Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX): a pair of
    cameras to image the boundary between the solar system and
    interstellar space with 100 times the sensitivity of
    previous experiments. David J. McComas of the Southwest
    Research Institute, San Antonio, would lead IBEX at a
    total mission cost to NASA of $132 million.

    o The Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR): a
    telescope to carry out a census of black holes with 1000
    times more sensitivity than previous experiments. NuSTAR
    would be lead by Fiona Anne Harrison of the California
    Institute of Technology, Pasadena, at a total mission cost
    to NASA of $132 million.

    o The Jupiter Magnetospheric Explorer (JMEX): a telescope to
    study Jupiter's aurora and magnetosphere from Earth orbit.
    Nicholas M. Schneider of the University of Colorado at
    Boulder would lead JMEX, at a total mission cost to NASA
    of $133 million.

    NASA selected a long-duration balloon payload as the mission
    of opportunity. The Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna
    (ANITA) would detect radio waves emitted when high-energy
    neutrinos interact in the Antarctic ice shelf. ANITA would be
    led by Peter W. Gorham of the University of Hawaii at Manoa
    in Honolulu, at a total mission cost to NASA of $35 million.

    In addition, NASA selected a proposed mission for technology-
    development funding of the proposed instrument. Jean Swank of
    GSFC will develop a polarization sensitive X-ray detector.
    Swank will receive up to $300,000 over the next two years for
    her study.

    The five selected SMEX proposals are vying to be the tenth
    and eleventh SMEX missions selected for full development.
    Recent selections include the Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar
    Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI), launched in February 2002; the
    Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX), launched in April 2003;
    and the Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere mission (AIM), to
    be launched in 2006. The Explorer Program, managed by GSFC
    for NASA's Office of Space Science, is designed to provide
    frequent, low-cost access to space for physics and astronomy
    missions with small to mid-sized spacecraft.

    For more information about the Explorer Program on the
    Internet, visit:

    http://explorers.gsfc.nasa.gov

    For information about NASA and space science on the Internet,
    visit:

    http://www.nasa.gov

    -end-


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