EPSC Abstracts
Vol. 17, EPSC2024-1015, 2024, updated on 03 Jul 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/epsc2024-1015
Europlanet Science Congress 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Monday, 09 Sep, 11:35–11:45 (CEST)| Room Saturn (Hörsaal B)

The EnVision Mission to Venus – concept, science and status

Anne Grete Straume-Lindner1, Anne Pacros1, Mitch Schulte2, and the EnVision Science Working Team and Project Team members*
Anne Grete Straume-Lindner et al.
  • 1European Space Agency (ESA) - ESTEC, Noordwijk, Netherlands
  • 2NASA HQ, Washington DC, USA
  • *A full list of authors appears at the end of the abstract

EnVision is ESA’s next mission to Venus in partnership with NASA, where NASA provides the Synthetic Aperture Radar payload and mission support. The mission was adopted in January 2024, entering phase B2/C/D/E. The launch is scheduled for 2031, and the start of the science operations at Venus is expected in early 2035 following the mission cruise and aerobraking phase around Venus to achieve a low Venus polar orbit. The scientific objective of EnVision is to provide a holistic view of the planet from its inner core to its upper atmosphere, studying the planets history, activity and climate. EnVision aims to establish the nature and current state of Venus’ geological evolution and its relationship with the atmosphere. EnVision’s overall science objectives are to: (i) characterize the sequence of events that formed the regional and global surface features of Venus, as well as the geodynamic framework that has controlled the release of internal heat over Venus history; (ii) determine how geologically active the planet is today; (iii) establish the interactions between the planet and its atmosphere at present and through time. Furthermore, EnVision will look for evidence of past liquid water on its surface.

The nominal science phase of the mission will last six Venus cycles (~four Earth years), and ~210 Tbits of science data will be downlinked using a Ka-/X-band communication system. The science objectives will be addressed by five instruments and one experiment, provided by ESA member states and NASA. The VenSAR S-band radar will perform targeted surface imaging as well as polarimetric and stereo imaging, radiometry, and altimetry. The high-frequency Subsurface Radar Sounder (SRS) will sound the upper crust in search of material boundaries for the first time. Three spectrometers, VenSpec-U, VenSpec-H and VenSpec-M, operating in the UV and Near- and Short Wave-IR, respectively, will map trace gases, search for volcanic gas plumes above and below the clouds, and map surface emissivity and composition. A Radio Science Experiment (RSE) investigation will exploit the spacecraft Telemetry Tracking and Command (TT&C in Ka-/X bands) system to determine the planet’s gravity field and to sound the structure and composition of the middle atmosphere and the cloud layer in radio occultation. All instruments have heritage and robust margins relative to the requirements, with designs suitable for operation in the Venus environment, and chosen to meet the broad range of measurement requirements needed to support the EnVision scientific objectives. The EnVision science teams will adopt an open data policy, with public release of the scientific data after validation and verification. Public calibrated data availability is <6 months after data downlink.

The scientific objectives, instrumentation, and status of the EnVision mission will be presented, including an overview of on-going scientific and technical maturity activities and the next steps in the mission preparation.

EnVision Science Working Team and Project Team members:

Lorenzo Bruzzone (RSL, Università di Trento, Italy), Caroline Dumoulin (LPG, Nantes Université, France), Martin Ferus (JHI-CAS, Czeck Republic), Joern Helbert (Inst. for Planetary Research, DLR, Berlin, Germany), Scott Hensley (Jet Propulsion Laboratory, NASA, Pasadena, CA, USA), Luisa Lara (IAA, Spain), Jérémie Lasue (IRAP, Université Toulouse-III-Paul-Sabatier, France), Emmanuel Marcq (LATMOS, IPSL, Guyancourt, France), Paul Tackley (ETHZ, Switzerland), Silvia Tellmann (University of Cologne, Germany), Ann Carine Vandaele (Royal Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy (BIRA-IASB), Brussels, Belgium), Sandrine Vinatier (LESIA, Observatoire de Paris, France), Thomas Widemann (LESIA, Observatoire de Paris, France), Thomas Voirin (ESA), Jayne Lefort (ESA), Alessandro Atzei (ESA), Mei Mei Stienstra (ESA), Alex Short (ESA), Arno Wielders (ESA), Ramon de Paula (NASA HQ), Brad Zavodsky (NASA MSFC)

How to cite: Straume-Lindner, A. G., Pacros, A., and Schulte, M. and the EnVision Science Working Team and Project Team members: The EnVision Mission to Venus – concept, science and status, Europlanet Science Congress 2024, Berlin, Germany, 8–13 Sep 2024, EPSC2024-1015, https://doi.org/10.5194/epsc2024-1015, 2024.