Status Report

DPS Mailing #01-44: Decadal survey, astrobiology workshop

By SpaceRef Editor
October 29, 2001
Filed under , ,

SOLAR SYSTEM EXPLORATION SURVEY UPDATE, LARGE SATELLITES

The NRC Large Satellites Panel of the Solar System Exploration Survey
solicits your input with regard to science themes and key questions in
our draft outline. It is available in word95, html, and text formats at:

http://pirlwww.lpl.arizona.edu/~mcewen/LSAT/

The original format is word95, so the text and html versions contain
some formatting errors.

We have not yet attempted to prioritize future missions or other
initiatives, but further comments about these important issues continue
to be welcome.

The tasks of the Large Satellites panel are: to conduct a broad survey
of the current state of knowledge about the large outer planet
satellites; to inventory the top-level scientific questions that should
provide the focus for large satellite exploration in the coming decade
and beyond; and to produce a prioritized list of the most promising
avenues for flight investigations and supporting ground-based
activities.

The NRC Large Satellites Panel consists of Alfred McEwen (Chair), Bob
Pappalardo (Vice-Chair), Caitlin Griffith, Torrence Johnson, Krishan
Khurana, and Bill Moore. For the purpose of this survey, a “large”
satellite is defined as those satellites of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus,
and Neptune >300 km diameter. The smaller (generally irregular)
satellites of these planets and Pluto/Charon are covered by the
Primitive Bodies panel; Triton will be considered by both the Large
Satellites and the Primitive Bodies panels.

Please send your comments to:

mcewen@jupiter.lpl.arizona.edu

or fax to 520-621-9628

I will forward all correspondence to the other panel members.

We also encourage you to post your comments at the DPS website:

http://www.aas.org/decadal/cgi-bin/bbs/bbs_forum.cgi?forum=largesat

Cheers,

Alfred McEwen

MARS ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY & ASTROBIOLOGY WORKSHOP

California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA

December 17-19, 2001


The California Institute of Technology and the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory are hosting a multi-disciplinary workshop to identify what
observations of the composition of the Mars atmosphere would allow
the detection of extant subsurface life, remnants of life, or
signatures of past climate supportive of life. A key question is how
to distinguish between actual biosignatures and atmospheric
composition resulting from volcanic emissions and other
non-biological natural processes that might be occurring on Mars.

Members of the scientific community are invited to participate in
plenary session discussions and present poster talks. The proceedings
of the workshop will be published.

Further information may be found at the workshop website

(http://www.gps.caltech.edu/meetings/MACA).
Registration will be through this website.

The NASA Astrobiology Institute will entertain requests for travel
support. See the workshop website for additional details.

JOB ANNOUNCEMENT

Planetary Volcanology & Astrobiology tenure track faculty positions,
Dept. of Geology & Planetary Science, Univ. of Pittsburgh.
http://www.geology.pitt.edu/jobs/job-ad01.html

See also AAS Job Register: http://www.aas.org/JobRegister/aasjobs.html

Melissa McGrath, on behalf of the DPS Committee
(submissions to Al Harris: awharris@lithos.jpl.nasa.gov)

SpaceRef staff editor.