ESSC-ESF Position Paper: Science-Driven Scenario for Space Exploration: Report from the European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC)

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

ESSC-ESF Position Paper: Science-Driven Scenario for Space Exploration: Report from the European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC). / Worms, Jean-Claude; Lammer, Helmut; Barucci, Antonella; Beebe, Reta; Bibring, Jean-Pierre; Blamont, Jacques; Blanc, Michel; Bonnet, Roger; Brucato, John R; Chassefière, Eric; Coradini, Angioletta; Crawford, Ian; Ehrenfreund, Pascale; Falcke, Heino; Gerzer, Rupert; Grady, Monica; Grande, Manuel; Haerendel, Gerhard; Horneck, Gerda; Koch, Bernhard; Lobanov, Andreï; Lopez-Moreno, José J; Marco, Roberto; Norsk, Peter; Rothery, Dave; Swings, Jean-Pierre; Tropea, Cam; Ulamec, Stephan; Westall, Frances; Zarnecki, John.

I: Astrobiology, 2009.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Worms, J-C, Lammer, H, Barucci, A, Beebe, R, Bibring, J-P, Blamont, J, Blanc, M, Bonnet, R, Brucato, JR, Chassefière, E, Coradini, A, Crawford, I, Ehrenfreund, P, Falcke, H, Gerzer, R, Grady, M, Grande, M, Haerendel, G, Horneck, G, Koch, B, Lobanov, A, Lopez-Moreno, JJ, Marco, R, Norsk, P, Rothery, D, Swings, J-P, Tropea, C, Ulamec, S, Westall, F & Zarnecki, J 2009, 'ESSC-ESF Position Paper: Science-Driven Scenario for Space Exploration: Report from the European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC)', Astrobiology. https://doi.org/10.1089/ast.2007.1226

APA

Worms, J-C., Lammer, H., Barucci, A., Beebe, R., Bibring, J-P., Blamont, J., Blanc, M., Bonnet, R., Brucato, J. R., Chassefière, E., Coradini, A., Crawford, I., Ehrenfreund, P., Falcke, H., Gerzer, R., Grady, M., Grande, M., Haerendel, G., Horneck, G., ... Zarnecki, J. (2009). ESSC-ESF Position Paper: Science-Driven Scenario for Space Exploration: Report from the European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC). Astrobiology. https://doi.org/10.1089/ast.2007.1226

Vancouver

Worms J-C, Lammer H, Barucci A, Beebe R, Bibring J-P, Blamont J o.a. ESSC-ESF Position Paper: Science-Driven Scenario for Space Exploration: Report from the European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC). Astrobiology. 2009. https://doi.org/10.1089/ast.2007.1226

Author

Worms, Jean-Claude ; Lammer, Helmut ; Barucci, Antonella ; Beebe, Reta ; Bibring, Jean-Pierre ; Blamont, Jacques ; Blanc, Michel ; Bonnet, Roger ; Brucato, John R ; Chassefière, Eric ; Coradini, Angioletta ; Crawford, Ian ; Ehrenfreund, Pascale ; Falcke, Heino ; Gerzer, Rupert ; Grady, Monica ; Grande, Manuel ; Haerendel, Gerhard ; Horneck, Gerda ; Koch, Bernhard ; Lobanov, Andreï ; Lopez-Moreno, José J ; Marco, Roberto ; Norsk, Peter ; Rothery, Dave ; Swings, Jean-Pierre ; Tropea, Cam ; Ulamec, Stephan ; Westall, Frances ; Zarnecki, John. / ESSC-ESF Position Paper: Science-Driven Scenario for Space Exploration: Report from the European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC). I: Astrobiology. 2009.

Bibtex

@article{caf0ccf035ac11df8ed1000ea68e967b,
title = "ESSC-ESF Position Paper: Science-Driven Scenario for Space Exploration: Report from the European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC)",
abstract = "Abstract In 2005 the then ESA Directorate for Human Spaceflight, Microgravity and Exploration (D-HME) commissioned a study from the European Science Foundation's (ESF) European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC) to examine the science aspects of the Aurora Programme in preparation for the December 2005 Ministerial Conference of ESA Member States, held in Berlin. A first interim report was presented to ESA at the second stakeholders meeting on 30 and 31 May 2005. A second draft report was made available at the time of the final science stakeholders meeting on 16 September 2005 in order for ESA to use its recommendations to prepare the Executive proposal to the Ministerial Conference. The final ESSC report on that activity came a few months after the Ministerial Conference (June 2006) and attempted to capture some elements of the new situation after Berlin, and in the context of the reduction in NASA's budget that was taking place at that time; e.g., the postponement sine die of the Mars Sample Return mission. At the time of this study, ESSC made it clear to ESA that the timeline imposed prior to the Berlin Conference had not allowed for a proper consultation of the relevant science community and that this should be corrected in the near future. In response to that recommendation, ESSC was asked again in the summer of 2006 to initiate a broad consultation to define a science-driven scenario for the Aurora Programme. This exercise ran between October 2006 and May 2007. ESA provided the funding for staff support, publication costs, and costs related to meetings of a Steering Group, two meetings of a larger ad hoc group (7 and 8 December 2006 and 8 February 2007), and a final scientific workshop on 15 and 16 May 2007 in Athens. As a result of these meetings a draft report was produced and examined by the Ad Hoc Group. Following their endorsement of the report and its approval by the plenary meeting of the ESSC, the draft report was externally refereed, as is now normal practice with all ESSC-ESF reports, and amended accordingly. The Ad Hoc Group defined overarching scientific goals for Europe's exploration programme, dubbed {"}Emergence and co-evolution of life with its planetary environments,{"} focusing on those targets that can ultimately be reached by humans, i.e., Mars, the Moon, and Near Earth Objects. Mars was further recognized as the focus of that programme, with Mars sample return as the recognized primary goal; furthermore the report clearly states that Europe should position itself as a major actor in defining and leading Mars sample return missions. The report is reproduced in this article. On 26 November 2008 the Ministers of ESA Member States decided to give a high strategic priority to the robotic exploration programme of Mars by funding the enhanced ExoMars mission component, in line therefore with the recommendations from this ESSC-ESF report. Astrobiology 9, xxx-xxx.",
author = "Jean-Claude Worms and Helmut Lammer and Antonella Barucci and Reta Beebe and Jean-Pierre Bibring and Jacques Blamont and Michel Blanc and Roger Bonnet and Brucato, {John R} and Eric Chassefi{\`e}re and Angioletta Coradini and Ian Crawford and Pascale Ehrenfreund and Heino Falcke and Rupert Gerzer and Monica Grady and Manuel Grande and Gerhard Haerendel and Gerda Horneck and Bernhard Koch and Andre{\"i} Lobanov and Lopez-Moreno, {Jos{\'e} J} and Roberto Marco and Peter Norsk and Dave Rothery and Jean-Pierre Swings and Cam Tropea and Stephan Ulamec and Frances Westall and John Zarnecki",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1089/ast.2007.1226",
language = "English",
journal = "Astrobiology",
issn = "1531-1074",
publisher = "Mary AnnLiebert, Inc. Publishers",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - ESSC-ESF Position Paper: Science-Driven Scenario for Space Exploration: Report from the European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC)

AU - Worms, Jean-Claude

AU - Lammer, Helmut

AU - Barucci, Antonella

AU - Beebe, Reta

AU - Bibring, Jean-Pierre

AU - Blamont, Jacques

AU - Blanc, Michel

AU - Bonnet, Roger

AU - Brucato, John R

AU - Chassefière, Eric

AU - Coradini, Angioletta

AU - Crawford, Ian

AU - Ehrenfreund, Pascale

AU - Falcke, Heino

AU - Gerzer, Rupert

AU - Grady, Monica

AU - Grande, Manuel

AU - Haerendel, Gerhard

AU - Horneck, Gerda

AU - Koch, Bernhard

AU - Lobanov, Andreï

AU - Lopez-Moreno, José J

AU - Marco, Roberto

AU - Norsk, Peter

AU - Rothery, Dave

AU - Swings, Jean-Pierre

AU - Tropea, Cam

AU - Ulamec, Stephan

AU - Westall, Frances

AU - Zarnecki, John

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Abstract In 2005 the then ESA Directorate for Human Spaceflight, Microgravity and Exploration (D-HME) commissioned a study from the European Science Foundation's (ESF) European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC) to examine the science aspects of the Aurora Programme in preparation for the December 2005 Ministerial Conference of ESA Member States, held in Berlin. A first interim report was presented to ESA at the second stakeholders meeting on 30 and 31 May 2005. A second draft report was made available at the time of the final science stakeholders meeting on 16 September 2005 in order for ESA to use its recommendations to prepare the Executive proposal to the Ministerial Conference. The final ESSC report on that activity came a few months after the Ministerial Conference (June 2006) and attempted to capture some elements of the new situation after Berlin, and in the context of the reduction in NASA's budget that was taking place at that time; e.g., the postponement sine die of the Mars Sample Return mission. At the time of this study, ESSC made it clear to ESA that the timeline imposed prior to the Berlin Conference had not allowed for a proper consultation of the relevant science community and that this should be corrected in the near future. In response to that recommendation, ESSC was asked again in the summer of 2006 to initiate a broad consultation to define a science-driven scenario for the Aurora Programme. This exercise ran between October 2006 and May 2007. ESA provided the funding for staff support, publication costs, and costs related to meetings of a Steering Group, two meetings of a larger ad hoc group (7 and 8 December 2006 and 8 February 2007), and a final scientific workshop on 15 and 16 May 2007 in Athens. As a result of these meetings a draft report was produced and examined by the Ad Hoc Group. Following their endorsement of the report and its approval by the plenary meeting of the ESSC, the draft report was externally refereed, as is now normal practice with all ESSC-ESF reports, and amended accordingly. The Ad Hoc Group defined overarching scientific goals for Europe's exploration programme, dubbed "Emergence and co-evolution of life with its planetary environments," focusing on those targets that can ultimately be reached by humans, i.e., Mars, the Moon, and Near Earth Objects. Mars was further recognized as the focus of that programme, with Mars sample return as the recognized primary goal; furthermore the report clearly states that Europe should position itself as a major actor in defining and leading Mars sample return missions. The report is reproduced in this article. On 26 November 2008 the Ministers of ESA Member States decided to give a high strategic priority to the robotic exploration programme of Mars by funding the enhanced ExoMars mission component, in line therefore with the recommendations from this ESSC-ESF report. Astrobiology 9, xxx-xxx.

AB - Abstract In 2005 the then ESA Directorate for Human Spaceflight, Microgravity and Exploration (D-HME) commissioned a study from the European Science Foundation's (ESF) European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC) to examine the science aspects of the Aurora Programme in preparation for the December 2005 Ministerial Conference of ESA Member States, held in Berlin. A first interim report was presented to ESA at the second stakeholders meeting on 30 and 31 May 2005. A second draft report was made available at the time of the final science stakeholders meeting on 16 September 2005 in order for ESA to use its recommendations to prepare the Executive proposal to the Ministerial Conference. The final ESSC report on that activity came a few months after the Ministerial Conference (June 2006) and attempted to capture some elements of the new situation after Berlin, and in the context of the reduction in NASA's budget that was taking place at that time; e.g., the postponement sine die of the Mars Sample Return mission. At the time of this study, ESSC made it clear to ESA that the timeline imposed prior to the Berlin Conference had not allowed for a proper consultation of the relevant science community and that this should be corrected in the near future. In response to that recommendation, ESSC was asked again in the summer of 2006 to initiate a broad consultation to define a science-driven scenario for the Aurora Programme. This exercise ran between October 2006 and May 2007. ESA provided the funding for staff support, publication costs, and costs related to meetings of a Steering Group, two meetings of a larger ad hoc group (7 and 8 December 2006 and 8 February 2007), and a final scientific workshop on 15 and 16 May 2007 in Athens. As a result of these meetings a draft report was produced and examined by the Ad Hoc Group. Following their endorsement of the report and its approval by the plenary meeting of the ESSC, the draft report was externally refereed, as is now normal practice with all ESSC-ESF reports, and amended accordingly. The Ad Hoc Group defined overarching scientific goals for Europe's exploration programme, dubbed "Emergence and co-evolution of life with its planetary environments," focusing on those targets that can ultimately be reached by humans, i.e., Mars, the Moon, and Near Earth Objects. Mars was further recognized as the focus of that programme, with Mars sample return as the recognized primary goal; furthermore the report clearly states that Europe should position itself as a major actor in defining and leading Mars sample return missions. The report is reproduced in this article. On 26 November 2008 the Ministers of ESA Member States decided to give a high strategic priority to the robotic exploration programme of Mars by funding the enhanced ExoMars mission component, in line therefore with the recommendations from this ESSC-ESF report. Astrobiology 9, xxx-xxx.

U2 - 10.1089/ast.2007.1226

DO - 10.1089/ast.2007.1226

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 19203241

JO - Astrobiology

JF - Astrobiology

SN - 1531-1074

ER -

ID: 18764832