http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7053057.stm



 *Europe floats future space ideas*

*A mission could be launched before the end of the next decade to put a
balloon on Titan, the hazy Saturnian moon.*

The balloon is one of several ideas being considered by the European Space
Agency as it sketches out where its science should be focussed in future.

Other proposals include an X-ray telescope that flies in two parts; and a
sample-return mission to an asteroid.

All the ideas will be subjected to further study; and are likely to evolve
as international partners get involved.

Eventually, two missions will be selected, one to fly no earlier than 2017
and the other no earlier than 2018.

Esa's future-scoping project is known as Cosmic Vision. It assesses the big
questions currently in space science and then tries to find mission
architectures that can best deliver the answers.

There are two categories: large (L-Class), which will cost Esa something in
the region of 650m euros; and medium (M-Class), which is projected to cost
the agency about 300m euros.

For the big missions, international partnerships are necessary because the
costs involved are so great. A recent US space agency (Nasa) report found
that no meaningful mission to the Saturnian system could be undertaken for
less than $1bn (700m euros) and would in all events cost considerably more.

The Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 candidates will undergo an internal review in
Esa before contracts are awarded to industry to carry out feasibility
studies.

The L-Class candidates include:

   - *Laplace*: This mission would go to Jupiter and its moons. A key
   target of interest would be the icy moon Europa which is thought to harbour
   an ocean under its icy crust. The mission would deploy three orbiting
   platforms to perform coordinated observations of Europa, the other Jovian
   satellites, Jupiter's magnetosphere and its atmosphere and interior.
   - *Tandem*: The mission would explore both Titan and Enceladus, the
   other Saturnian moon currently fascinating scientists. The mission would
   carry two spacecraft - an orbiter and a carrier to deliver an
   instrument-carrying balloon and three probes on to Titan.
   - *Xeus*: This next-generation telescope would study the X-ray
   Universe. It comes in two parts: a mirror satellite and a detector satellite
   which have to be flown in formation with extreme precision.
   - *Spica*: The Japanese are proposing an L-Class mission which would
   launch a telescope to study the cosmos at far infrared wavelengths. If
   Europe became involved, it would bring expertise and technology developed
   for its own Herschel telescope due to launch next year.

The M-Class candidates include:

   - *Cross-scale: *A swarm of 12 spacecraft to make simultaneous
   measurements of plasma (charged gas) surrounding Earth.
   - *Marco Polo: *A sample-return mission to a near-Earth object. It
   would consist of a mother satellite which would carry a lander, sampling
   devices, re-entry capsule as well as instruments.
   - *Dune and Space: *These are two mission ideas before Esa that would
   tell us more about the mysterious "dark matter" and even stranger "dark
   energy" that seem to dominate our Universe but which have proven
   frustratingly difficult to explain with current observation technologies.
   - *Plato: *A mission to find and study planets beyond our Solar
   System. It would be capable of observing rocky (similar to Earth) exoplanets
   around brighter and better characterised stars than its predecessors, such
   as the recently launched Corot mission.

At the end of the assessment process, it is likely Esa will select just one
L-Class and one M-Class to take forward to full development and launch.

One complicating factor is the desire to loft an observatory into space that
can test a key prediction of Albert Einstein's Theory of General Relativity
- by making a detection of gravitational waves.

Europe and the US are together developing a mission known as Lisa which
would detect these "ripples" in the fabric of space-time - but it is proving
an immense challenge from a technological standpoint.

Whether or not one of the L-Class missions listed above gets to be developed
may depend on how well, or not, progress is made on Lisa (Laser
Interferometer Space Antenna).


GRAVITATIONAL WAVES
 Gravitational waves are an inevitable consequence of the Theory of General
Relativity
They describe the gravity force as distortions made by matter in the fabric
of space-time
Any moving mass will produce waves; they are expected to propagate at the
speed of light
Detectable sources to include exploding stars, merging black holes and
neutron stars
If Lisa is made to work, it would see remnant radiation from the Big Bang
itself


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