ArXiv TLDR

Planetary Exploration 3.0: A Roadmap for Software-Defined, Radically Adaptive Space Systems

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2604.20910

Masahiro Ono, Daniel Selva, Morgan L. Cable, Marie Ethvignot, Margaret Hansen + 21 more

astro-ph.IMastro-ph.EPcs.AIcs.ROeess.SY

TLDR

Proposes Planetary Exploration 3.0, using software-defined, radically adaptive space systems to explore distant outer solar system worlds in single missions.

Key contributions

  • Introduces Planetary Exploration 3.0 for exploring the outer Solar System.
  • Leverages software-defined space systems for radical in-situ adaptation.
  • Integrates onboard intelligence for autonomous science and navigation.
  • Presents three PE 3.0 mission concepts for distant, unexplored worlds.

Why it matters

The traditional incremental approach (PE 2.0) is infeasible for the outer Solar System due to long cruise times. PE 3.0 offers a solution by enabling single, highly adaptive missions to conduct both initial and hypothesis-driven science. This paradigm shift is crucial for unlocking the secrets of distant, unexplored worlds.

Original Abstract

The surface and subsurface of worlds beyond Mars remain largely unexplored. Yet these worlds hold keys to fundamental questions in planetary science - from potentially habitable subsurface oceans on icy moons to ancient records preserved in Kuiper Belt objects. NASA's success in Mars exploration was achieved through incrementalism: 22 progressively sophisticated missions over decades. This paradigm, which we call Planetary Exploration 2.0 (PE 2.0), is untenable for the outer Solar System, where cruise times of a decade or more make iterative missions infeasible. We propose Planetary Exploration 3.0 (PE 3.0): a paradigm in which unvisited worlds are explored by a single or a few missions with radically adaptive space systems. A PE 3.0 mission conducts both initial exploratory science and follow-on hypothesis-driven science based on its own in situ data returns, evolving spacecraft capabilities to work resiliently in previously unseen environments. The key enabler of PE 3.0 is software-defined space systems (SDSSs) - systems that can adapt their functions at all levels through software updates. This paper presents findings from a Keck Institute for Space Studies (KISS) workshop on PE 3.0, covering: (1) PE 3.0 systems engineering including science definition, architecture, design methods, and verification & validation; (2) software-defined space system technologies including reconfigurable hardware, multi-functionality, and modularity; (3) onboard intelligence including autonomous science, navigation, controls, and embodied AI; and (4) three PE 3.0 mission concepts: a Neptune/Triton smart flyby, an ocean world explorer, and an Oort cloud reconnaissance mission.

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