Joint Europa Mission (JEM): a multi-scale study of Europa to characterize its habitability and search for extant life

  • Michel Blanc
  • , Olga Prieto-Ballesteros
  • , Nicolas André
  • , Javier Gomez-Elvira
  • , Geraint Jones
  • , Veerle Sterken
  • , William Desprats
  • , Leonid I. Gurvits
  • , Krishan Khurana
  • , Georges Balmino
  • , Aljona Blöcker
  • , Renaud Broquet
  • , Emma Bunce
  • , Cyril Cavel
  • , Gaël Choblet
  • , Geoffrey Colins
  • , Marcello Coradini
  • , John Cooper
  • , Dominic Dirkx
  • , Dominique Fontaine
  • Philippe Garnier, David Gaudin, Paul Hartogh, Hauke Hussmann, Antonio Genova, Luciano Iess, Adrian Jäggi, Sascha Kempf, Norbert Krupp, Luisa Lara, Jérémie Lasue, Valéry Lainey, François Leblanc, Jean Pierre Lebreton, Andrea Longobardo, Ralph Lorenz, Philippe Martins, Zita Martins, Jean Charles Marty, Adam Masters, David Mimoun, Ernesto Palumba, Victor Parro, Pascal Regnier, Joachim Saur, Adriaan Schutte, Edward C. Sittler, Tilman Spohn, Ralf Srama, Katrin Stephan, Károly Szegő, Federico Tosi, Steve Vance, Roland Wagner, Tim Van Hoolst, Martin Volwerk, Jan Erik Wahlund, Frances Westall, Peter Wurz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Europa is the closest and probably the most promising target to search for extant life in the Solar System, based on complementary evidence that it may fulfil the key criteria for habitability: the Galileo discovery of a sub-surface ocean; the many indications that the ice shell is active and may be partly permeable to transfer of chemical species, biomolecules and elementary forms of life; the identification of candidate thermal and chemical energy sources necessary to drive a metabolic activity near the ocean floor. In this article we are proposing that ESA collaborates with NASA to design and fly jointly an ambitious and exciting planetary mission, which we call the Joint Europa Mission (JEM), to reach two objectives: perform a full characterization of Europa's habitability with the capabilities of a Europa orbiter, and search for bio-signatures in the environment of Europa (surface, subsurface and exosphere) by the combination of an orbiter and a lander. JEM can build on the advanced understanding of this system which the missions preceding JEM will provide: Juno, JUICE and Europa Clipper, and on the Europa lander concept currently designed by NASA (Maize, report to OPAG, 2019). We propose the following overarching goals for our Joint Europa Mission (JEM): Understand Europa as a complex system responding to Jupiter system forcing, characterize the habitability of its potential biosphere, and search for life at its surface and in its sub-surface and exosphere. We address these goals by a combination of five Priority Scientific Objectives, each with focused measurement objectives providing detailed constraints on the science payloads and on the platforms used by the mission. The JEM observation strategy will combine three types of scientific measurement sequences: measurements on a high-latitude, low-altitude Europan orbit; in-situ measurements to be performed at the surface, using a soft lander; and measurements during the final descent to Europa's surface. The implementation of these three observation sequences will rest on the combination of two science platforms: a soft lander to perform all scientific measurements at the surface and sub-surface at a selected landing site, and an orbiter to perform the orbital survey and descent sequences. We describe a science payload for the lander and orbiter that will meet our science objectives. We propose an innovative distribution of roles for NASA and ESA; while NASA would provide an SLS launcher, the lander stack and most of the mission operations, ESA would provide the carrier-orbiter-relay platform and a stand-alone astrobiology module for the characterization of life at Europa's surface: the Astrobiology Wet Laboratory (AWL). Following this approach, JEM will be a major exciting joint venture to the outer Solar System of NASA and ESA, working together toward one of the most exciting scientific endeavours of the 21st century: to search for life beyond our own planet.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104960
JournalPlanetary and Space Science
Volume193
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Nov 2020

Keywords

  • Habitability
  • Jupiter system
  • Ocean moon
  • Outer planets exploration
  • Search for life

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