NASA Selects Science Investigations For Concept Studies

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Sep. 29, 2011

Dwayne Brown 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1726 
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 11-328

NASA SELECTS SCIENCE INVESTIGATIONS FOR CONCEPT STUDIES

WASHINGTON -- NASA has selected 11 science proposals for evaluation as 
potential future science missions. The proposals outline prospective 
missions to study the Earth's atmosphere, the sun, the Milky Way 
galaxy, and Earth-like planets around nearby stars. 

The selections were made from responses to Announcements of 
Opportunity for Explorer Missions and Explorer Missions of 
Opportunity released by the agency last November. The proposals were 
judged to have the best science value and feasible development plans. 


"NASA continues to seek opportunities to push the cutting edge of 
science," said Paul Hertz, chief scientist for NASA's Science Mission 
Directorate, Washington. "Innovative proposals like these will help 
us better understand our solar system and the universe." 

Five Explorer Mission proposals were selected from 22 submitted in 
February. Each team will receive $1 million to conduct an 11-month 
mission concept study. Mission costs are capped at $200 million each, 
excluding the launch vehicle. In addition, one Explorer Mission 
proposal was selected for technology development and will receive 
$600,000. Five Mission of Opportunity proposals were selected from 20 
submissions. Each will receive $250,000 to conduct an 11-month 
implementation concept study. Mission costs are capped at $55 million 
each. 

Following the detailed mission concept studies, NASA plans to select 
up to two of the Explorer Mission proposals and one or more of the 
five Mission of Opportunity proposals in February 2013. The missions 
would then proceed toward flight and some could launch by 2016. 

The selected Explorer Mission proposals are: 

-Ionospheric Connection Explorer (ICON) Thomas Immel, Principal 
Investigator (PI), University of California, Berkeley -- The mission 
would fly instruments to understand the extreme variability in our 
Earth's ionosphere, which can interfere with communications and 
geopositioning signals. 

-Fast INfrared Exoplanet Spectroscopy Survey Explorer (FINESSE) Mark 
Swain, PI, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California -- This 
proposal would use a space telescope to survey more than 200 planets 
around other stars. This would be the first mission dedicated to 
finding out what comprises exoplanet atmospheres, what conditions or 
processes are responsible for their composition, and how our solar 
system fits into the larger family of planets. 

-Observatory for Heteroscale Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Coupling (OHMIC) 
James Burch, PI, Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, Texas -- 
The mission would use a pair of spacecraft flying in formation to 
study the processes that provide energy to power space weather 
storms. These storms create auroras and other electromagnetic 
activity that can impact orbiting spacecraft operations. 

-Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) George Ricker, PI, 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass. -- Using an 
array of telescopes, TESS would perform an all-sky survey to discover 
transiting exoplanets, ranging from Earth-sized to gas giants, in 
orbit around the nearest and brightest stars in the sky. The 
mission's primary goal would be to identify terrestrial planets in 
the habitable zones of nearby stars. 

-Atmosphere-Space Transition Region Explorer (ASTRE) Robert Pfaff Jr., 
PI, NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. -- The mission 
would study the interaction between the Earth's atmosphere and the 
ionized gases of space. By flying excursions deep into the Earth's 
upper atmosphere, its measurements would improve satellite drag 
models and show how space-induced currents in electric power grids 
originate and evolve with time. 

The selected Explorer Mission of Opportunity proposals are: 

-Global-scale Observations of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) Richard Eastes, 
PI, University of Central Florida, Orlando -- This would involve an 
imaging instrument that would fly on a commercial communications 
satellite in geostationary orbit to image the Earth's thermosphere 
and ionosphere. 

-Neutron star Interior Composition ExploreR (NICER) Keith Gendreau, 
PI, Goddard -- This mission would place an X ray timing instrument on 
the International Space Station (ISS) to explore the exotic states of 
matter within neutron stars and reveal their interior and surface 
compositions. 

-Coronal Physics Investigator (CPI) John Kohl, PI, Smithsonian 
Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, Mass. -- A solar telescope 
would be mounted on the ISS to investigate the processes that produce 
the sun's fast and slow solar wind. 

-Gal/Xgal U/LDB Spectroscopic/Stratospheric THz Observatory (GUSSTO) 
Christopher Walker, PI, University of Arizona, Tucson -- This mission 
would launch a high altitude balloon with a one-meter telescope to 
provide a comprehensive understanding of the inner workings of our 
Milky Way galaxy and one of our galaxy's companion galaxies, the 
Large Magellanic Cloud. 

-Ion Mass Spectrum Analyzer for SCOPE (IMSA), Lynn Kistler PI, 
University of New Hampshire, Durham -- This partner mission of 
opportunity would provide a composition instrument to the Japanese 
cross-Scale Coupling in the Plasma universE (SCOPE) mission. SCOPE 
will study fundamental space plasma processes including particle 
acceleration, magnetic reconnection, and plasma turbulence. 
The proposal selected for technology development funding is: 

-The Exoplanetary Circumstellar Environments and Disk Explorer 
(EXCEDE), Glenn Schneider, PI, University of Arizona, Tucson -- The 
technology development effort will enable studies of the formation, 
evolution, and architectures of exoplanetary systems through direct 
imaging. 

The Explorer program is the oldest continuous program at NASA. It is 
designed to provide frequent, low-cost access to space using PI-led 
space science investigations relevant to the agency's astrophysics 
and heliophysics programs. Initiated with the Explorer 1 launch in 
1958 that discovered the Earth's radiation belts and including the 
Cosmic Background Explorer mission that led to Nobel prizes for their 
investigators, the Explorer program has launched more than 90 
missions. It is managed by Goddard for NASA's Science Mission 
Directorate in Washington. 

For more information about the Explorer program, visit: 


http://explorers.gsfc.nasa.gov   

	
-end-



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