00:00The most exciting thing about Europa can be summarized in one word, water.
00:06Now think about all the water on Earth, and double that.
00:10That's what we think is on Europa.
00:13We need to go there to explore it, to understand,
00:16is this place a habitable environment that could potentially support life?
00:22Getting close to Europa is a huge challenge.
00:24It sits in the worst possible radiation environment, trapped by Jupiter.
00:30What is Europa?
00:34Europa is a moon of Jupiter, about the size of Earth's moon,
00:39which has an icy surface that probably hides a subsurface ocean.
00:45Scientists think Europa has the key ingredients to support life as we know it.
00:50Number one, water.
00:52Number two, energy.
00:54And three, essential chemical building blocks.
00:58For the first time ever, we're sending a spacecraft completely dedicated to studying this moon.
01:03The three main things that we're going to explore at Europa
01:06are the ice and the ocean and understand that intersection between the two,
01:10study the chemical composition of the moon,
01:12as well as the geology and whether it's active currently.
01:16Europa Clipper is not specifically a life search mission.
01:19We're going to understand the potential habitability of Europa.
01:25This spacecraft has nine instruments and a gravity science investigation.
01:31Five of the instruments are called remote sensing instruments
01:35because they measure light reflected off Europa, like a camera or a spectrometer.
01:40The other four instruments are measuring the environment around them,
01:45like sniffing gases or dust.
01:48Europa Clipper is the largest spacecraft NASA has ever built for a planetary mission.
01:54It weighs 13,000 pounds, six and a half tons.
01:57That's like the size of a huge African elephant.
02:00And the solar arrays are massive.
02:02If you put the solar arrays at the toes of the Statue of Liberty,
02:05the other end of the arrays would come up to the Statue of Liberty's crown.
02:08So not only are they big, these things are technological marvels.
02:12They are being bathed in radiation all the time
02:15and they have to survive the entire mission like that.
02:19Jupiter's radiation environment is intense
02:22and Europa sits in the worst part of that environment.
02:25Jupiter acts like a giant particle accelerator.
02:29There are charged particles trapped in Jupiter's magnetosphere that rotate with it.
02:34And these particles slam against Europa and will slam into our spacecraft as well.
02:40We protect the spacecraft in two ways.
02:42Number one, we try to minimize the amount of time we spend in there,
02:45which is why we are orbiting Jupiter and just flying by Europa.
02:50The second way we protect against the radiation is by having an electronics vault
02:54that we put our computer and some of the other sensitive electronics inside,
02:59which is made of about a third of an inch of aluminum.
03:03With each flyby of Europa, the outside surface of the spacecraft
03:06sees the equivalent of a million chest X-rays just as we're flying by.
03:12It's a pretty long trip to get to Jupiter from Earth,
03:14but not that bad from a planetary standpoint.
03:17From launch to the time we get to Jupiter is about five and a half years.
03:21And along the way, we have a flyby of Mars and then another flyby of Earth
03:26to get gravity assists to slingshot the spacecraft out to Jupiter.
03:34I hope for the future explorers who are watching this at home
03:38that they take away from this that humanity, when we come together,
03:42can achieve really cool things.
03:44This mission has been a long time coming,
03:47and we're so excited about what we're going to see when we get there.
03:52We are in a golden age of robotic spaceflight exploration.
03:56How could you not be excited about something as monumental as this?
04:02I am most excited about the potential to unlock the secrets of Europa,
04:05the potential to really understand this crazy world that exists
04:10and has likely existed in this condition for four billion years.
04:14NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
04:44NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
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