VIPER - Student research on extraterrestrial ice penetration technology
F. Baader, M. Reiswich, M. Bartsch, D. Keller, E. Tiede, G. Keck, A., Demircian, M. Friedrich, B. Dachwald, K. Sch\"uller, R. Lehmann, R., Chojetzki, C. Durand, L. Rapp, J. Kowalski, R. F\"orstner

TL;DR
This paper discusses the development and testing of a maneuverable melting probe designed for sampling subsurface water on icy moons like Enceladus, combining terrestrial experiments, numerical simulations, and spaceflight experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a novel melting probe prototype capable of navigating and melting through ice in extraterrestrial conditions, supported by experimental and numerical analysis.
Findings
Successful terrestrial testing of the melting probe
Numerical simulations show gravity dependence of melting behavior
Spaceflight experiment provides 90 seconds of reduced gravity data
Abstract
Recent analysis of scientific data from Cassini and earth-based observations gave evidence for a global ocean under a surrounding solid ice shell on Saturn's moon Enceladus. Images of Enceladus' South Pole showed several fissures in the ice shell with plumes constantly exhausting frozen water particles, building up the E-Ring, one of the outer rings of Saturn. In this southern region of Enceladus, the ice shell is considered to be as thin as 2 km, about an order of magnitude thinner than on the rest of the moon. Under the ice shell, there is a global ocean consisting of liquid water. Scientists are discussing different approaches the possibilities of taking samples of water, i.e. by melting through the ice using a melting probe. FH Aachen UAS developed a prototype of maneuverable melting probe which can navigate through the ice that has already been tested successfully in a terrestrial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlanetary Science and Exploration · Astro and Planetary Science · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies
