posted on 2020-10-01, 08:56authored byLN Fletcher, AA Simon, MD Hofstadter, CS Arridge, I Cohen, A Masters, K Mandt, A Coustenis
The international planetary science community met in London in January 2020,
united in the goal of realising the first dedicated robotic mission to the
distant Ice Giants, Uranus and Neptune, as the only major class of Solar System
planet yet to be comprehensively explored. Ice-Giant-sized worlds appear to be
a common outcome of the planet formation process, and pose unique and extreme
tests of our understanding of planetary origins, exotic water-rich planetary
interiors, dynamic seasonal atmospheres, complex magnetospheric configurations,
geologically-rich icy satellites (both natural and captured), and delicate
planetary rings. This article introduces a special issue of Philosophical
Transactions of the Royal Society A on Ice Giant System exploration at the
start of the 2020s. We review the scientific potential and existing mission
design concepts for an ambitious international partnership for exploring Uranus
and/or Neptune in the coming decades.
History
Citation
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, (special issue "Ice Giant Systems"), 25 December 2020
Volume 378Issue 2187
Author affiliation
School of Physics and Astronomy
Version
AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Published in
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences
13 pages, 2 figures. Introductory article (accepted) for "Ice Giant
Systems" special issue of Phil. Trans. A, based on Royal Society Discussion
Meeting, Jan 2020