Science goals and objectives for the dragonfly titan rotorcraft relocatable lander

117Citations
Citations of this article
89Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

NASA's Dragonfly mission will send a rotorcraft lander to the surface of Titan in the mid-2030s. Dragonfly's science themes include investigation of Titan's prebiotic chemistry, habitability, and potential chemical biosignatures from both water-based "life as we know it" (as might occur in the interior mantle ocean, potential cryovolcanic flows, and/or impact melt deposits) and potential "life, but not as we know it" that might use liquid hydrocarbons as a solvent (within Titan's lakes, seas, and/or aquifers). Consideration of both of these solvents simultaneously led to our initial landing site in Titan's equatorial dunes and interdunes to sample organic sediments and water ice, respectively. Ultimately, Dragonfly's traverse target is the 80 km diameter Selk Crater, at 7° N, where we seek previously liquid water that has mixed with surface organics. Our science goals include determining how far prebiotic chemistry has progressed on Titan and what molecules and elements might be available for such chemistry. We will also determine the role of Titan's tropical deserts in the global methane cycle. We will investigate the processes and processing rates that modify Titan's surface geology and constrain how and where organics and liquid water can mix on and within Titan. Importantly, we will search for chemical biosignatures indicative of past or extant biological processes. As such, Dragonfly, along with Perseverance, is the first NASA mission to explicitly incorporate the search for signs of life into its mission goals since the Viking landers in 1976 2021. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Barnes, J. W., Turtle, E. P., Trainer, M. G., Lorenz, R. D., MacKenzie, S. M., Brinckerhoff, W. B., … Stähler, S. C. (2021). Science goals and objectives for the dragonfly titan rotorcraft relocatable lander. Planetary Science Journal, 2(4). https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/abfdcf

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free