Volatile Sample Return in the Solar System
Stefanie N. Milam, Jason P. Dworkin, Jamie E. Elsila, Daniel P., Glavin, Perry A. Gerakines, Julie L. Mitchell, Keiko Nakamura-Messenger, Marc, Neveu, Larry Nittler, James Parker, Elisa Quintana, Scott A. Sandford, Joshua, E. Schlieder, Rhonda Stroud, Melissa G. Trainer

TL;DR
This paper advocates for volatile sample return missions from various solar system bodies, emphasizing new concepts, challenges, and the importance of preserving sample integrity for scientific analysis.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive plan and evaluation of mechanisms, protocols, and challenges for volatile sample return missions across different environments in the solar system.
Findings
Sample return is crucial for understanding planetary formation and habitability.
Challenges include maintaining sample integrity and planetary protection.
Proposed methods include laboratory simulations and specialized collection mechanisms.
Abstract
We advocate for the realization of volatile sample return from various destinations including: small bodies, the Moon, Mars, ocean worlds/satellites, and plumes. As part of recent mission studies (e.g., Comet Astrobiology Exploration SAmple Return (CAESAR) and Mars Sample Return), new concepts, technologies, and protocols have been considered for specific environments and cost. Here we provide a plan for volatile sample collection and identify the associated challenges with the environment, transit/storage, Earth re-entry, and curation. Laboratory and theoretical simulations are proposed to verify sample integrity during each mission phase. Sample collection mechanisms are evaluated for a given environment with consideration for alteration. Transport and curation are essential for sample return to maximize the science investment and ensure pristine samples for analysis upon return and…
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