The Hera Saturn Entry Probe Mission
O. Mousis, D.H. Atkinson, T. Spilker, E. Venkatapathy, J. Poncy, R., Frampton, A. Coustenis, K. Reh, J.-P. Lebreton, L. N. Fletcher, R. Hueso, M., J. Amato, A. Colaprete, F. Ferri, D. Stam, P. Wurz, S. Atreya, S. Aslam, D., J. Banfield, S. Calcutt, G. Fischer, A. Holland

TL;DR
The Hera Saturn entry probe mission aims to send an atmospheric probe into Saturn to perform in situ measurements, enhancing understanding of giant planet formation and evolution, with international collaboration from ESA and NASA.
Contribution
This paper proposes a novel Saturn atmospheric probe mission, combining ESA and NASA elements, to improve insights into planetary formation and evolution beyond previous missions.
Findings
Design of Hera mission with ESA and NASA collaboration
In situ measurements of Saturn's atmospheric composition and dynamics
Expected to extend understanding of giant planet formation
Abstract
The Hera Saturn entry probe mission is proposed as an M--class mission led by ESA with a contribution from NASA. It consists of one atmospheric probe to be sent into the atmosphere of Saturn, and a Carrier-Relay spacecraft. In this concept, the Hera probe is composed of ESA and NASA elements, and the Carrier-Relay Spacecraft is delivered by ESA. The probe is powered by batteries, and the Carrier-Relay Spacecraft is powered by solar panels and batteries. We anticipate two major subsystems to be supplied by the United States, either by direct procurement by ESA or by contribution from NASA: the solar electric power system (including solar arrays and the power management and distribution system), and the probe entry system (including the thermal protection shield and aeroshell). Hera is designed to perform in situ measurements of the chemical and isotopic compositions as well as the…
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