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31 votes
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47-year-old Voyager 1 spacecraft just fired up thrusters it hasn’t used in decades
53 votes -
NASA’s Europa Clipper mission looked doomed. Could engineers save it?
7 votes -
NASA’s Voyager 1 resumes sending engineering updates to Earth
39 votes -
Fifty years later, this Apollo-era antenna still talks to Voyager 2
14 votes -
Death, lonely death
26 votes -
Flipped bit could mark the end of Voyager 1‘s interstellar mission
14 votes -
NASA detects signal from Voyager 2 after losing contact due to wrong command
46 votes -
NASA’s Voyager 2 is experiencing an unplanned ‘communications pause’ expected to last until October 15
28 votes -
NASA prepares for historic asteroid sample delivery on Sept. 24, 2023
11 votes -
Voyager engineers keep on tickin' in new documentary 'It's Quieter in the Twilight'
8 votes -
NASA’s Perseverance rover deposits first sample on Mars surface
4 votes -
NASA and ESA agree on next steps to return Mars samples to Earth
6 votes -
How Japan managed to launch rockets into orbit without steering
5 votes -
Starbase factory tour with Elon Musk: Part II
8 votes -
Starbase factory tour with Elon Musk: Part I
6 votes -
Japan’s Hayabusa2 capsule carrying asteroid samples from 162173 Ryugu recovered in South Australian outback
13 votes -
China's Chang'e-5 mission has successfully landed on the moon, will now collect and return the first lunar samples since 1976
13 votes -
SpaceX Falcon 9 "Sentinel-6" launch, from launch to landing with ground tracking, annotated with altitude and velocity
8 votes -
Falcon 9 launches "Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich" ocean science satellite, lands Falcon 9 first stage back at Vandenberg SLC-4E
7 votes -
After twenty years of service, the International Space Station flies into an uncertain future
11 votes -
Europa Clipper inches forward, shackled to the Earth
3 votes -
The NASA team that kills spacecraft
6 votes -
NASA delays JWST launch by seven months
7 votes -
Vehicle processing delay with ULA's Atlas 5 rocket causes Mars 2020 rover launch to slip to July 30, near end of launch window
5 votes -
Taking on the challenge of Mars sample return
7 votes -
The Hubble Space Telescope launched thirty years ago—then the problems began
7 votes -
NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover gets balanced
5 votes -
Mars 2020 remains on track for July launch
8 votes -
The Mars Helicopter has been attached to the Mars 2020 Perseverance rover
9 votes -
Rehearsal time for OSIRIS-REx, NASA’s asteroid sampling spacecraft
5 votes -
“Overstressed” NASA Mars exploration budget threatens missions
5 votes -
Planetary science decadal survey to include astrobiology and planetary defense
3 votes -
NASA won't be able to send commands to Voyager 2 for the next eleven months, while upgrades are made to the Deep Space Network
8 votes -
ExoMars parachute tests delayed, mission faces review
4 votes -
WFIRST, proposed for cancellation, is approved for development
3 votes -
Falcon Heavy to launch NASA Psyche asteroid mission
6 votes -
NASA selects four finalists for next Discovery mission
8 votes -
Details pour in from New Horizons’ visit to Arrokoth, an object in the Kuiper Belt
7 votes -
NASA brings Voyager 2 fully back online, 11.5 billion miles from Earth
21 votes -
Voyager 2 engineers working to restore normal operations
10 votes -
NASA prepares to shut down Spitzer Space Telescope
6 votes -
Ask Tildes: Design a spacecraft! You've been offered to submit a space exploration misson, with a cost cap of $1 billion. What is your proposal?
You've been asked to submit a proposal for a space exploration mission of your own desire, to the New Frontiers spaceflight program. These missions have a cost cap of approximately $700 million to...
You've been asked to submit a proposal for a space exploration mission of your own desire, to the New Frontiers spaceflight program. These missions have a cost cap of approximately $700 million to $1 billion, and have famously produced the following spacecraft:
- New Horizons, a flyby probe to Pluto.
- Juno, a polar orbiter of Jupiter.
- OSIRIS-REx, a sample return mission to a rocky asteroid.
- Dragonfly, a drone lander to Saturn's moon Titan.
These are medium-sized missions in both scope, and cost. You can't build the Mars 2020 Rover, or the James Webb Space Telescope. What do you send, and where? Things to consider:
Technology Readiness Level
Administrators are less likely to choose your mission if you choose to integrate risky or untested flight hardware, or novel concepts into the mission design. You're more likely to get selected with more conventional hardware.
Power Source
Your best bet is probably solar panels, maybe something commercial off the shelf like NG's Ultraflex panels? The downside is that these are only effective up to about Jupiter's orbit, and generate power according to the inverse square law. How much do these cost and weigh? How much energy do you generate?
If you go further out into the solar system than that, you'll need a Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator (RTG). There aren't many of those around, in fact, after Mars 2020 has taken its RTG, there's two left. What makes your mission deserving of an RTG? Is there enough power in the MMRTG to power your mission?
Propulsion
Does your mission need in-flight propulsion? Either for orbit insertion, landing, or maybe a long coast with Ion thrusters like Dawn? If the latter, you can get some pretty good Xenon-powered thrusters, like NEXT, which gives you 236mN of force from 7kW of input power (this rules out an RTG as your power source).
Don't need long-term burn capability? Maybe a COTS bipropellant engine like LEROS is your thing. Watch your weight though, bipropellants aren't efficient! Often more than half the mass of large spacecraft can be dedicated to just propulsion alone.
Instruments
Go crazy. What are you looking to research? Do you need a long range camera, a wide angle camera, something outside of the visible spectrum, a spectrometer, ground-penetrating radar? Do you have a mass-budget in mind?
Launch Vehicle
Every dollar you save on your launch vehicle, you get to add to your mission profile. Your best bet in terms of performance and cost is probably Falcon 9, which retails for $62-90 million, depending on the amount of assurance for success you need. Of course, if you can find a cheaper launch vehicle, feel free to pick it if it fits into your mission weight.
Objectives
What scientific questions do you want to answer? What are you interested in exploring the most?
13 votes -
Diving and driving on icy moons: One strategy for exploring Enceladus and Europa
3 votes -
ESA's exoplanet mission Cheops (Characterising Exoplanet Satellite) has successfully launched
6 votes -
NASA's OSIRIS-Rex team has officially selected the site on asteroid Bennu to collect a sample for return to Earth
8 votes -
A look at the differences between the Curiosity rover and Mars 2020, which will start exploring Mars' Jezero Crater for signs of life in 2021
12 votes -
Voyager 2 illuminates the boundary of interstellar space
9 votes -
The self-hammering probe on NASA’s Mars lander can’t seem to actually dig into the ground
10 votes -
Tunnelling mole instrument on Mars InSight lander resumes movement into Martian surface
7 votes