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Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Planetary
Micro-Penetrators
Dr Rob Gowen on behalf of Glyn Collinson
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+ international - Germany, France, Austria, Italy, Poland, Russia, USA
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
What are kinetic penetrators ?
 Low mass projectiles ~2-13Kg
Detachable
Propulsion Stage
– Lunar A 13.5Kg
– DS-2 3.6Kg
 High impact speed
~ 200-500 m/s
Point of
Separation
Payload
Instruments
 Very tough ~10-50kgee
 Penetrate surface
~ few metres
 Perform important
science from below
surface
Penetrator
PDS
(Penetrator
Delivery System)
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Penetrator Mission : Europa
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
History
No survivable high velocity impacting probe has
been successfully landed on any extraterrestrial
body

DS2 (Mars) NASA 1999 ?
 Mars96 (Russia) failed to leave Earth orbit

Japanese Lunar-A cancelled
(now planned to fly on Russian Lunar Glob)
 Many paper studies and ground trials
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
UK Heritage and Feasibility
• Military have been successfully firing instrumented projectiles
for many years to at least comparable levels of gee forces
expected.
• Target materials mostly concrete and steel
• 40,000gee qualified electronics exist (re-used !)
• DS-2 and Lunar-A penetrators – space qualified.
When asked to describe the condition of a
probe that had impacted 2m of concrete at
300 m/s a UK expert described the device
as ‘a bit scratched’ !
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Examples of hi-gee
electronic systems
Designed and tested :
– Communication systems
• 36 GHz antenna, receiver and electronic
fuze tested to 45 kgee
– Dataloggers
• 8 channel, 1 MHz sampling rate tested
to 60 kgee
– MEMS devices (accelerometers, gyros)
• Tested to 50 kgee
– MMIC devices
• Tested to 20 kgee
MMIC chip tested to 20 kgee
Communication system and
electronic fuze tested to 45
kgee
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Prime Planetary Targets
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Scientific Objectives - Luna
• Core
– Water and volatile detection
– Seismology
– Accelerometer
• Desirable
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–
–
–
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Descent camera
Heat Flow
Geochemistry/XRF
Mineralogy
Radiation Monitor
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Science – Polar Volatiles
A suite of instruments will detect and characterise
volatiles (including water) within shaded craters at
both poles
• Astrobiologically important
– possibly remnant of the original seeding of planets
by comets
– may provide evidence of important cosmic-ray
mediated organic synthesis
• Vital to the future manned exploration of
the Moon
Prototype,
ruggedized ion trap
mass-spectrometer
Open University
NASA Lunar Prospector
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Science – Lunar Seismology
A global network of seismometers will tell us:
–
–
–
–
–
Size and physical state of the Lunar Core
Structure of the Lunar Mantle
Thickness of the far side crust
The origin of the enigmatic shallow moon-quakes
The seismic environment at potential
manned landing sites
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Europa Penetrator ‘Payload’ Science
• Beeping Transmitter
– For Earth based VLBI determination of surface ice
movement (deformation, seismic vibration)
• Accelerometer
- Determination of ice characteristics and
penetration depth.
• Micro-Seismometers/tilt-meter
- Detection of natural (or impact) seismic activity.
- Presence and size of an under ice ocean.
- ‘cryo-tectonic’ activity
• Chemical Sensors
- Presence, extent, concentration of organics
(possible life indicators).
- Presence, extent and concentration of other
chemical species
(minerals, chirality, isotopic abundances ?)
• Other sensors: Micro-camera (descent,
surface), magnetometer, radiation monitor,
etc.
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Enceladus

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
500Km dia. (c.f. with UK)
Fierce south pole plume (ice/dust)
Hi-albedo covering Saturnian moons ?
‘Atmosphere’ (H2O,N2,CO2,CH4)
Liquid water under surface (life ?)
(image from Wikipedia)
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Titan
•
•
•
•
•
•
~50% larger than our Moon
Atmosphere ~4x denser that Earth’s at
surface
Mountains, sand dunes, lakes,
geologically young
Weather (winds, clouds, precipitation,
seasons)
Complex organic chemistry
Very Earth like ! but cold (Life ?)
dunes
(Wikipedia)
Fluvial plain
Cosmic Visions Proposal
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Consortium Status
1. MoonLITE Mission - currently in discussion
with BNSC and NASA
2. Europa (LAPLACE) and Titan/Enceladus
(TANDEM) ESA Cosmic Vision Proposals –
Selected, 18 month study phase commences.
3. Full-scale structure impact trial – March 2008
4. Pre-mission development – Preparing bids
for 2 yr development to bring technology
ruggedization up to TRL 5.
http://www.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/planetary/missions/Micro_Penetrators.php
Mullard Space Science Laboratory
End
http://www.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/planetary/missions/Micro_Penetrators.php
Polar comms
orbiter
MoonLITE
3
 Delivery and Comms Spacecraft (Orbiter).
Deliver penetrators to ejection orbit.
provide pre-ejection health status,
and relay communications.
Far side
 Orbiter Payload: 4 Descent Probes
4
(each containing 10-15 kg penetrator
+ 20-25 kg de-orbit and attitude
control).
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 Landing sites: Globally spaced
Far side, Polar region(s), One near
an Apollo landing site for calibration.
 Duration: >1 year for seismic network.
Other science does not require so long
(perhaps a few Lunar cycles for heat flow
and volatiles much less).
 Penetrator Design: Single Body for
simplicity and risk avoidance. Battery powered
with comprehensive power saving techniques.
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