Serina Diniega

and 4 more

Since 2001, the Mars Exploration Program Analysis Group (MEPAG) has maintained a document outlining community consensus priorities for scientific goals, objectives, and investigations for the robotic and human exploration of Mars [1]. This “Goals Document” is a living document that is revised regularly (~every few years) in light of new Mars science results. It is organized into a hierarchy of goals, objectives, and investigations. The four Goals are not prioritized and are organized around major areas of scientific knowledge: “Life”, “Climate”, “Geology”, and “Preparation for Human Exploration”. Don Banfield is the current MEPAG Goals Committee Chair, and he oversees 2-3 representatives per Goal [2]. The most recent round of revisions (2018) was prompted by discussion at the 6th International Mars Polar Science and Exploration Conference (held in 2016 in Reykjavik, Iceland [3]), which pointed out that current high-priority Polar Science and Present-Day Activity questions were not well represented in content or priorities within the 2015 Goals Document. Upon request from the MEPAG Executive and Goals Committees [2], specific areas of disconnect were highlighted by representatives of the Mars Polar Science community; these were evaluated by the Goals Committee who proposed changes at sub-objective and investigation levels within the Climate and Geology Goals. These proposed changes were open for comment by the larger Mars community for 6 weeks, and then finalized. The official MEPAG 2018 Goals Document will be presented at the meeting. Additionally, the presentation will describe plans for the next round of revisions, which are expected to primarily come out of the presentations and discussion at the 9th International Conference on Mars (to be held at Caltech, Pasadena, CA in July 2019 [4]), and which are expected to include reference to returned sample science. The 2019 MEPAG Goals Document will form an important input to the next Planetary Science Decadal Survey [5]. [1] https://mepag.jpl.nasa.gov/reports.cfm?expand=science [2] https://mepag.jpl.nasa.gov/about.cfm [3] https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/marspolar2016/ [4] https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/ninthmars2019/ [5] NASEM, 2017. CAPS: Getting Ready for the Next Planetary Science Decadal Survey. https://doi.org/10.17226/24843.

Ali Bramson

and 18 more

One of the next giant leaps for humanity—inhabiting our neighbor planet Mars—requires enough water to support multi-year human survival and to create rocket fuel for the nearly 150-million-mile return trip to Earth. Water that is already on Mars, in the form of ice, is one of the leading in situ resources being considered in preparation for human exploration. Human missions will need to land in locations with relatively warm temperatures and consistent sunlight. But in these locations, ice (if present) is buried underground. Much of the ice known to exist in mid-latitude locations was likely emplaced under climate conditions (and orbital parameters) different from today. So in addition to providing an in-situ resource for human exploration, Martian ice also provides a crucial record of planetary climate change and the effects of orbital forcing.This presentation will highlight techniques and recent activities to characterize Mars’ underground ice, such as the Subsurface Water Ice Mapping (SWIM) Project (Morgan et al. 2021, Nature Astro.; Putzig et al. In Press, Handbook of Space Resources; Putzig et al. this AGU; Morgan et al. this AGU). We present outstanding questions that will be vital to address in the context of ISRU (in situ resource utilization) and connections between these questions and the climate in which the ice was emplaced and evolved (e.g., Bramson et al. 2020, Decadal White Paper). Lastly, we discuss how these science activities intersect with future exploration, particularly that enabled by collaborations between space agencies as well as industry partners (Heldmann et al. 2020, Decadal White Paper; Golombek et al. 2021, LPSC).High-priority future work includes better orbital characterization of shallow ice deposits, such as radar sounding at shallower scales (<~10m) than that of SHARAD, as proposed for the International Mars Ice Mapper. Also needed are detailed studies of the engineering required to build potential settlements at specific candidate locations; this includes characterization of the nature of the overburden above the ice, which will inform future resource extraction technology development efforts. Ideally, initial landing sites would be chosen with a long-term vision which includes preparation and development of the basic technologies and designs needed for human landing on Mars.

Kim Tait

and 10 more

All material that is collected from Mars (gases, dust, rock, regolith) will need to be carefully handled, stored, and analyzed following Earth return to minimize the alteration or contamination that could occur, and to maximize the scientific information that can be extracted from the samples, now and into the future. A Sample Receiving Facility (SRF) would be where the Earth Entry System is opened, and the sample tubes opened and processed after they land on Earth. The Mars Sample Return (MSR) Science Planning Group Phase 2 (MSPG2) was tasked with identifying the steps that encompass the curation activities that would happen within an MSR SRF and any anticipated curation-related requirements. To make the samples accessible for scientific investigation, a series of observations and preliminary analytical measurements would need to be completed to produce a sample catalog for the scientific community. The sample catalog would provide data to make informed requests for samples for scientific investigations and for the approval of allocations of appropriate samples to satisfy these requests. The catalog would include data and information generated during all phases of activity, including data derived from the landed Mars 2020 mission, during sample retrieval and transport to Earth, and upon receipt within the SRF, as well as through the initial sample characterization process, sterilization- and time-sensitive and science investigations. The Initial sample characterization process can be divided into three phases, with increasing complexity and invasiveness: Pre-Basic Characterization (Pre-BC), Basic Characterization (BC), and Preliminary Examination (PE). A significant portion of the Curation Focus Group’s efforts was determining which analyzes and thus instrumentation would be required to produce the sample catalog and how and when certain instrumentation should be used. The goal is to provide enough information for the PIs to request material for their studies but to avoid doing targeted scientific research better left to peer-reviewed competitive processes. Disclaimer: The decision to implement Mars Sample Return will not be finalized until NASA’s completion of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process. This document is being made available for planning and information purposes only.