Hubbry Logo
NASA large strategic science missionsNASA large strategic science missionsMain
Open search
NASA large strategic science missions
Community hub
NASA large strategic science missions
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
NASA large strategic science missions
from Wikipedia

Artist's Rendering of James Webb Space Telescope
The James Webb Space Telescope launched in December 2021. By the time it launched, JWST cost about US$10 billion.

NASA's large strategic science missions or large strategic missions, formerly known as Flagship missions or Flagship-class missions,[1][2] are the costliest and most capable NASA science spacecraft. Flagship missions exist within all four divisions of NASA's Science Mission Directorate (SMD): the astrophysics, Earth science, heliophysics and planetary science divisions.

"Large" refers to the budget of each mission, typically the most expensive mission in the scientific discipline. Within the Astrophysics Division and the Planetary Science Division, the large strategic missions are usually in excess of US$1 billion. Within Earth Science Division and Heliophysics Division, the large strategic missions are usually in excess of US$500 million.[3][2] "Strategic" refers to their role advancing multiple strategic priorities set forth in plans such as the Decadal Surveys.[2] "Science" marks these missions as primarily scientific in nature, under the Science Mission Directorate (SMD), as opposed to, e.g., human exploration missions under the Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate (HEOMD). The lines can be blurred, as when the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter began as a directed mission from the HEOMD, and was later transferred to the SMD.

Flagship missions are not under the purview of any larger "Flagship Program", unlike, e.g., Discovery-class missions that are under the purview of the Discovery Program. Unlike these competed classes that tender proposals through a competitive selection process, the development of Flagship missions is directed to a specific institution — usually a NASA center or the Jet Propulsion Laboratory — by the Science Mission Directorate.[2][1] Flagship missions are developed ad-hoc, with no predetermined launch cadence or uniform budget size. Flagship missions are always Class A missions:[4] high priority, very low risk.[2]

Missions

[edit]
NASA Large Strategic Science Missions[2]
Mission name Mission start Mission end
Planetary Science Division
Viking 1, 2[5] 1975 1982
Voyager 1, 2[5] 1977 Operational
Galileo[5] 1989 2003
Cassini[5] 1997 2017
Mars Science Laboratory/Curiosity rover[6] 2011 Operational
Mars 2020/Perseverance rover + Ingenuity helicopter[6] 2020 Operational
Europa Clipper[6] 2024 Operational
NASA–ESA Mars Sample Return Mission[7] 2028–30 Proposed
Uranus Orbiter and Probe 2032 Proposed
Enceladus Orbilander 2038 Proposed
Astrophysics Division
Hubble Space Telescope[8] 1990 Operational
Compton Gamma Ray Observatory[8] 1991 2000
Chandra X-ray Observatory[8][9] 1999 Operational
James Webb Space Telescope[10][11] 2021 Operational
Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope[12][13] 2027 In development
Habitable Worlds Observatory[14][15] 2040 Proposed
Heliophysics Division
Solar Dynamics Observatory[16] 2010 Operational
Van Allen Probes[16] 2012 2019
Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS)[17] 2015 Operational
Parker Solar Probe[18] 2018 Operational
Earth Science Division
Terra[19][20] 1999 Operational
Aqua[19][20] 2002 Operational
ICESat[21] 2003 2010
Aura[20] 2004 Operational
Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS) ─ a constellation[21] 2011 Operational
Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem (PACE)[22] 2024 Operational

Of the four Great Observatories, only the Spitzer Space Telescope is not a Flagship mission. Initially budgeted at US$2 billion, Spitzer was downscoped to a medium-size mission of US$720 million.[2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.