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Inicio  /  Aerospace  /  Vol: 9 Par: 11 (2022)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Venus Life Finder Habitability Mission: Motivation, Science Objectives, and Instrumentation

Sara Seager    
Janusz J. Petkowski    
Christopher E. Carr    
Sarag J. Saikia    
Rachana Agrawal    
Weston P. Buchanan    
David H. Grinspoon    
Monika U. Weber    
Pete Klupar    
Simon P. Worden    
Iaroslav Iakubivskyi    
Mihkel Pajusalu    
Laila Kaasik and on behalf of the Venus Life Finder Mission Team    

Resumen

For over half a century, scientists have contemplated the potential existence of life within the clouds of Venus. Unknown chemistry leaves open the possibility that certain regions of the Venusian atmosphere are habitable. In situ atmospheric measurements with a suite of modern instruments can determine whether the cloud decks possess the characteristics needed to support life as we know it. The key habitability factors are cloud particle droplet acidity and cloud-layer water content. We envision an instrument suite to measure not only the acidity and water content of the droplets (and their variability) but additionally to confirm the presence of metals and other non-volatile elements required for life?s metabolism, verify the existence of organic material, and search for biosignature gases as signs of life. We present an astrobiology-focused mission, science goals, and instruments that can be used on both a large atmospheric probe with a parachute lasting about one hour in the cloud layers (40 to 60 km) or a fixed-altitude balloon operating at about 52 km above the surface. The latter relies on four deployable mini probes to measure habitability conditions in the lower cloud region. The mission doubles as a preparation for sample return by determining whether a subset of cloud particles is non-liquid as well as characterizing the heterogeneity of the cloud particles, thereby informing sample collection and storage methods for a return journey to Earth.

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