WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.010 --> 00:00:04.170 (Music) 2 00:00:04.190 --> 00:00:08.360 (Music) 3 00:00:08.380 --> 00:00:12.540 Bruce Jakosky: I want to start my story with this picture not 4 00:00:12.560 --> 00:00:16.710 of the Earth but of an early Mars. We know that 5 00:00:16.730 --> 00:00:20.890 Mars had a thicker atmosphere, was warmer, a much wetter environment 6 00:00:20.910 --> 00:00:25.040 than we see today. Because we see crater lakes 7 00:00:25.060 --> 00:00:29.060 on the surface, ancient lakes, valley networks that were carved by 8 00:00:29.080 --> 00:00:33.100 by liquid water. Over time though, the environment 9 00:00:33.120 --> 00:00:37.220 changed. Today, we see a much colder, dryer desert 10 00:00:37.240 --> 00:00:41.330 and we have to ask, "What's responsible for that change?" On early Mars 11 00:00:41.350 --> 00:00:45.400 we think that there was a lot more water. We think that the atmosphere was 12 00:00:45.420 --> 00:00:49.460 a thick CO2, carbon dioxide atmosphere that 13 00:00:49.480 --> 00:00:53.490 somehow changed over time, that Mars has undergone significant climate change. 14 00:00:53.510 --> 00:00:57.670 Where did the water go? Where did the carbon dioxide go? 15 00:00:57.690 --> 00:01:01.850 It might have gone down into the crust where it can be locked up as 16 00:01:01.870 --> 00:01:06.020 minerals or as ice, or it might have gone up to the top of the atmosphere and been 17 00:01:06.040 --> 00:01:10.200 lost to space. That latter option is the one that MAVEN is going to be 18 00:01:10.220 --> 00:01:14.210 exploring. Looking at the role that loss to space may have 19 00:01:14.230 --> 00:01:18.370 played in the changing Mars climate. We think that this loss to space was 20 00:01:18.390 --> 00:01:22.510 driven by the Sun, by the solar wind hitting the planet 21 00:01:22.530 --> 00:01:26.630 by solar storms that eject out from the Sun hitting 22 00:01:26.650 --> 00:01:30.640 the planet, and stripping the atmosphere off. So we have to start with 23 00:01:30.660 --> 00:01:34.720 the Sun. When we look here at the quiet Sun we don't see the 24 00:01:34.740 --> 00:01:38.780 solar winds streaming out, out beyond that corona though it's going out 25 00:01:38.800 --> 00:01:42.820 at 500-1000 kilometers per second. And when it hits Mars 26 00:01:42.840 --> 00:01:46.850 it has the possibility of stripping some of the gas off. 27 00:01:46.870 --> 00:01:51.020 The more energetic Sun is much more interesting though, the 28 00:01:51.040 --> 00:01:55.210 solar wind is more intense, the solar storms that you can see here, 29 00:01:55.230 --> 00:01:59.260 are more intense, and the ability to strip off the gas is more 30 00:01:59.280 --> 00:02:03.430 significant. We're going to measure the properties of the sunlight 31 00:02:03.450 --> 00:02:07.450 hitting the planet, the solar wind, and the response of the atmosphere. 32 00:02:07.470 --> 00:02:11.600 When these solar storms eject from the Sun and head out 33 00:02:11.620 --> 00:02:15.730 through the solar system, seen here in this artist's representation, 34 00:02:15.750 --> 00:02:19.780 we want to know what effects they can have when they get to Mars. And when they 35 00:02:19.800 --> 00:02:23.840 do, we can see here in a representation from 36 00:02:23.860 --> 00:02:27.890 observations from spacecrafts spread throughout the solar system 37 00:02:27.910 --> 00:02:31.910 that they can hit Mars, they can have a significant effect. 38 00:02:31.930 --> 00:02:35.960 We know these storms happen, we need to see what happens when they get to 39 00:02:35.980 --> 00:02:40.140 Mars. So we're going to study the upper atmosphere which is the place form which 40 00:02:40.160 --> 00:02:44.170 gas is removed. And this image shows a representation 41 00:02:44.190 --> 00:02:48.370 of the upper atmosphere and what might happen when the solar wind hits it. 42 00:02:48.390 --> 00:02:52.540 The arrows represent streamlines; the colors represent the top of the 43 00:02:52.560 --> 00:02:56.700 atmosphere being stripped off by the solar wind when it hits the planet. 44 00:02:56.720 --> 00:03:00.840 That was to my mind was such a cool video I want to show this 45 00:03:00.860 --> 00:03:04.950 again, because I had to talk through the first time. When we 46 00:03:04.970 --> 00:03:09.000 see the atmosphere and the solar wind hitting it, 47 00:03:09.020 --> 00:03:13.090 it strips the gas off, and over geologic time that may have been 48 00:03:13.110 --> 00:03:17.140 responsible for changing the atmosphere, for 49 00:03:17.160 --> 00:03:21.180 driving the climate change that we see evidence for at Mars. 50 00:03:21.200 --> 00:03:25.210 We're going to do this now with the MAVEN spacecraft. It's a solar powered 51 00:03:25.230 --> 00:03:29.380 spacecraft. That bus in the middle, that almost cube like thing 52 00:03:29.400 --> 00:03:33.530 is about 7 feet across, to give you a sense of the scale. Most of the instruments 53 00:03:33.550 --> 00:03:37.670 are mounted around the edge of the high gain antenna 54 00:03:37.690 --> 00:03:41.800 seen in the middle, because they want to look at the Sun in order to capture the solar 55 00:03:41.820 --> 00:03:45.840 wind, the solar particles that hit it. And then at the 56 00:03:45.860 --> 00:03:49.990 bottom and the top are the instruments that measure the properties of the upper atmosphere. 57 00:03:50.010 --> 00:03:54.120 The ones at the bottom measure it in situ, at the location of 58 00:03:54.140 --> 00:03:58.220 the spacecraft. The ones at the top measure it both in situ and 59 00:03:58.240 --> 00:04:02.320 remotely, so we can get a global picture of what's happening with the 60 00:04:02.340 --> 00:04:06.400 Mars upper atmosphere today and how escape to space occurs. 61 00:04:06.420 --> 00:04:10.470 We've just finished building the spacecraft, unfortunately we're not 62 00:04:10.490 --> 00:04:14.490 really flying 4 of them, this just shows it at different steps. 63 00:04:14.510 --> 00:04:18.520 And fortunately they were more careful in building it than moving as fast 64 00:04:18.540 --> 00:04:22.700 as they are here. The spacecraft was built by Lockheed Martin 65 00:04:22.720 --> 00:04:26.880 in Denver, and I have to say they've provided us with what looks like it's going to be a honey 66 00:04:26.900 --> 00:04:31.060 of a spacecraft. Once it was built it goes into testing. Here we're seeing 67 00:04:31.080 --> 00:04:35.240 the deployment test of the solar arrays. We want to 68 00:04:35.260 --> 00:04:39.440 make sure that everything that the spacecraft is going to 69 00:04:39.460 --> 00:04:43.620 experience and do, it does on Earth. It experiences on 70 00:04:43.640 --> 00:04:47.650 Earth first, because we want to make sure it works. One of the 71 00:04:47.670 --> 00:04:51.820 most exciting tests is what's called thermal vacuum testing. We 72 00:04:51.840 --> 00:04:55.990 put it in a large chamber, you'll see it going in in just a minute, 73 00:04:56.010 --> 00:05:00.030 and pump it down to vacuum and put it through its paces. 74 00:05:00.050 --> 00:05:04.140 MAVEN spent 3 weeks in thermal vacuum testing, going 75 00:05:04.160 --> 00:05:08.240 through everything it's going to do once it's in orbit at Mars. 76 00:05:08.260 --> 00:05:12.310 The science instruments were cycled. The platform that holds 77 00:05:12.330 --> 00:05:16.350 them was moved. The spacecraft thought it was in orbit around Mars, again 78 00:05:16.370 --> 00:05:20.390 they didn't really move it this fast. They took a lot of care with it. 79 00:05:20.410 --> 00:05:24.570 You can imagine dropping it would not be a good thing. Once 80 00:05:24.590 --> 00:05:28.750 the testing was complete at the beginning of August, 81 00:05:28.770 --> 00:05:32.770 just a month and a half ago we shipped the whole thing down to Cape Canaveral, 82 00:05:32.790 --> 00:05:36.800 in Florida, that's where we're going to launch it from. We started off 83 00:05:36.820 --> 00:05:40.950 by driving it in a truck, in this big shipping 84 00:05:40.970 --> 00:05:45.100 container out to Buckley Air Force Base. Put it on a C-17, 85 00:05:45.120 --> 00:05:49.200 Air Force cargo jet and flew it down to Florida. 86 00:05:49.220 --> 00:05:53.320 Here in the C-17, it was so cool to me 87 00:05:53.340 --> 00:05:57.350 to ride along with it and just accompany it on the start of 88 00:05:57.370 --> 00:06:01.410 its trip to Mars. The launch vehicle, an Atlas V, 89 00:06:01.430 --> 00:06:05.460 is now at the Cape. It was delivered at the end of 90 00:06:05.480 --> 00:06:09.500 August and now we're in the process of integrating it all together. 91 00:06:09.520 --> 00:06:13.670 This isn't ours on the pad, but ours is going to look a lot like this. 92 00:06:13.690 --> 00:06:17.730 On November 18, we're going to launch into space, 93 00:06:17.750 --> 00:06:21.780 we have a 10-month cruise phase to get to Mars. We go into orbit with a 94 00:06:21.800 --> 00:06:25.950 rocket motor burn for 38 minutes. It takes us about a month 95 00:06:25.970 --> 00:06:30.120 then to commission the spacecraft; deploy the booms, test all the 96 00:06:30.140 --> 00:06:34.260 instruments, make sure everything is working right, and then we can begin 97 00:06:34.280 --> 00:06:38.330 our 1 Earth year science mission. In that year, 98 00:06:38.350 --> 00:06:42.390 we anticipate seeing enough variability of the solar input, 99 00:06:42.410 --> 00:06:46.440 of the solar wind input, of the solar energetic 100 00:06:46.460 --> 00:06:50.470 storms, to really understand what effects they have on the atmosphere. 101 00:06:50.490 --> 00:06:54.510 What this is going to do is going to tell us, coming back to the science now, 102 00:06:54.530 --> 00:06:58.540 "Where did that water go?" Where did the carbon dioxide go, 103 00:06:58.560 --> 00:07:02.720 from that early thick, warm wet environment? And this really isn't just 104 00:07:02.740 --> 00:07:06.900 about Mars, it's telling us about the evolution of the 105 00:07:06.920 --> 00:07:11.080 habitability of a planet by microbes. What is it that causes a planet to be 106 00:07:11.100 --> 00:07:15.240 habitable? And what is it that makes it not habitable? 107 00:07:15.260 --> 00:07:19.410 That's what MAVEN is going to be exploring. I hope you guys are going to see this with us. 108 00:07:19.430 --> 00:07:23.580 Thank you. 109 00:07:23.600 --> 00:07:27.700 (clapping) 110 00:07:27.720 --> 00:07:31.830 (music) 111 00:07:31.850 --> 00:07:35.950 (beeping) 112 00:07:35.970 --> 00:07:40.060 (beeping) 113 00:07:40.080 --> 00:07:41.909