Saturn's moon Enceladus offers a unique opportunity in the search for life
and habitable environments beyond Earth, a key theme of the National Research
Council's 2013-2022 Decadal Survey. A plume of water vapor and ice spews from
Enceladus's south polar region. Cassini data suggest that this plume, sourced
by a liquid reservoir beneath the moon's icy crust, contain organics, salts,
and water-rock interaction derivatives. Thus, the ingredients for life as we
know it-- liquid water, chemistry, and energy sources-- are available in
Enceladus's subsurface ocean. We have only to sample the plumes to investigate
this hidden ocean environment. We present a New Frontiers class, solar-powered
Enceladus orbiter that would take advantage of this opportunity, Testing the
Habitability of Enceladus's Ocean (THEO). Developed by the 2015 Jet Propulsion
Laboratory Planetary Science Summer School student participants under the
guidance of TeamX, this mission concept includes remote sensing and in situ
analyses with a mass spectrometer, a sub-mm radiometer-spectrometer, a camera,
and two magnetometers. These instruments were selected to address four key
questions for ascertaining the habitability of Enceladus's ocean within the
context of the moon's geological activity: (1) How are the plumes and ocean
connected? (2) Are the abiotic conditions of the ocean suitable for
habitability? (3) How stable is the ocean environment? (4) Is there evidence of
biological processes? By taking advantage of the opportunity Enceladus's plumes
offer, THEO represents a viable, solar-powered option for exploring a
potentially habitable ocean world of the outer solar system.Comment: JPL Summer School 201