How do we plan a mission that can go to Enceladus and grab a sample of its plumes? How fast does it need to go? Will it bring samples to Earth or analyse them on the spacecraft? Figuring out the answers with Professor Mark Burchell from the University of Kent.
📜 Hypervelocity impact induced light flash experiments on single and dual layer Kapton targets to develop a time of flight space dust and debris detector https://kar.kent.ac.uk/104841/)
👉 We Must Go Back To Enceladus! Here's Why https://youtu.be/Q3W-0LecU5k)
🦄 Support us on Patreon: https://patreon.com/universetoday)
📚 Suggest books in the book club: https://www.goodreads.com/group/show/1198440-universe-today-book-club)
00:00 Intro
02:07 Firing tardigrades from a gun
05:32 Enceladus
13:14 How fast can we go
21:07 Optimal mission to Enceladus
32:35 Exploring Io
41:43 Sampling interstellar objects
47:55 Dust in interstellar space
51:19 Current obsessions
01:01:04 Final thoughts and more interviews
📺 VIDEO VERSION https://youtu.be/xB1Tr3MWKKw)
📰 EMAIL NEWSLETTER Read by 60,000 people every Friday. Written by Fraser. No ads. Subscribe. It's FREE: https://universetoday.com/newsletter)
🎧 PODCASTS Universe Today: https://universetoday.fireside.fm/) Astronomy Cast: http://www.astronomycast.com/)
🤳 OTHER SOCIAL MEDIA Twitter: https://twitter.com/fcain) Twitter: https://twitter.com/universetoday) Facebook: https://facebook.com/universetoday) Instagram: https://instagram.com/universetoday)
📩 CONTACT FRASER [email protected])
⚖️ LICENSE Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)