The European Space Agency has selected its first L-class mission, the JUICE mission to Jupiter and its Galilean moons.

Here's a quote from the article (from my boss):

"People probably don't realise that habitable zones don't necessarily need to be close to a star - in our case, close to the Sun," explained Prof. Michele Dougherty, a Juice science team member from Imperial College London, UK.

"There are four conditions required for life to form. You need water; you need an energy source - so the ice can become liquid; you need the right chemistry - nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen; and the fourth thing you need is stability - a length of time that allows life to form.

"The great thing about the icy moons in the Jupiter system is that we think those four conditions might exist there; and Juice will tell us if that is the case," she told BBC News.


It's scheduled to launch in 2022. Fingers crossed that I will be working on it then, too!

(x-posted to [community profile] science)
sunflowerinrain: Singing at the National Railway Museum (Default)

From: [personal profile] sunflowerinrain


Brilliant. I wish these projects could move a bit faster, though - ten years to wait!
.

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