160 likes | 297 Views
MISSION PLANNING WORKING GROUP -ROADMAP- Roadmap Update for the ILWS Workshop Prague June 11, 2008. Presented by Andy Christensen Jim Spann Chris St. Cyr Arik Posner. Roadmap 2009. General update to previous roadmap Advances in knowledge Current fiscal and launch realities
E N D
MISSION PLANNING WORKING GROUP-ROADMAP-Roadmap Update forthe ILWS Workshop PragueJune 11, 2008 Presented by Andy Christensen Jim Spann Chris St. Cyr Arik Posner
Roadmap 2009 • General update to previous roadmap • Advances in knowledge • Current fiscal and launch realities • Focus on targeted science priorities • Not on mission timelines • Articulate approach to provide mission flexibility • Identify high priority science targets without constraining mission implementation
Roadmap Development Schedule • 3/7 Draft announcement for Townhall Meeting • 3/15 Team selection • 3/19 HPS presentation – NASA HQ • 4/15-16 Panel meeting #1- NASA HQ Panel expectations, Townhall organization, #3 meeting date selection • 5/19-20 Community Townhall Meeting – College Park, MD. • 5/20-21 Panel meeting #2 – College Park, MD. Writing assignments, science prioritization, start mission architecture analysis • 6/10-27 Community outreach (ILWS, HPS, CEDAR/GEM/SHINE) – Park City, UT • 7/3 First draft • 08/19-21 - Panel meeting #3 – Boulder, CO Finish science prioritization, implementation rationale and classification, final writing assignments, identify gaps and figures • September - Second draft ready for HPS meeting • September - HPS status • 11/20 Final draft
Roadmap Team Membership ListChair, two Co-Chairs, 12 Members, HQ Support Arik Posner, Barbara Giles, William Stabnow and Discipline Scientists (NASA/HQ)
Roadmap Table of Contents • Letter from Dick Fisher • Executive Summary • The Science • Overview of Heliophysics science • 3 Objectives and 12 RFAs • Situational Assessment • Recent Progress • Evolution of Goals • Where Heliophysics Fits and how it Relates in NASA • Heliophysics Landscape
Roadmap Table of Contents • The Program • Logical Framework for Science Prioritization • Science Implementation Scenarios • Science Implementation Program • Technology Investment • Capability Requirements • Affordable and Available Access to Space • Next Generation of Instrumentation • Returning Large Data Sets • Analysis, Data Assimilation, Modeling and Visualization • Enabling Space Weather Prediction
Roadmap Table of Contents • Education and Public Outreach • Appendices • Bibliography of key NASA and NRC documents • Strategic Planning Process • Impact on Decadal Survey • Design Reference Missions • Roadmap Team • Acronyms
The 2008 Heliophysics Town Hall Meetingwas held on May 19/20 in College Park, MD. Purpose of this meeting was to incorporate Heliophysics community input in terms of science priorities, recent major science achievements, technology advances, and mission implementation suggestions. The Town Hall web site http://heliophysics.gsfc.nasa.gov/Townhall08.htm contains standardized mission charts and other information on the outcome of the meeting. A feedback page is still open for roadmap-team solicited community input. Registered attendees: 108.
Workshop Objectives • Communicate the budget, launch environment, and other constraining factors • Provide a forum for community input and discussion of the state of Heliophysics • Suggested updates to the science objectives, Research Focus Areas (RFAs), and Science Targets in the near, mid-, and far term • New mission concepts across the range of small to large, especially consistent with potential launch vehicles
Breakout Sessions • Breakout Sessions 1 and 2 (1st day) • Science Discussions (question 1 and 2) • Mixed Discipline • Important that all disciplines be represented in all parallel sessions. • Breakout Session 3 (2nd day) • Discipline Focused discussion of technology • Two dedicated Poster Sessions
Questions to the Community • In your view, what is the most compelling and enabling science that will advance Heliophysics in the next 5-10 years? In the next 10 -20 years? • Does the science that you envision fit into the current roadmap Research Focus Areas? If so, which one (s)? If not, could you suggest a new Research Focus Area that would include your new science? are there any revisions to the RFAs that you would suggest? • Acknowledging that new discoveries in Heliophysics are often driven by the utilization of emerging and enabling technologies, what is needed in the areas of mission implementations (e.g. launch vehicles, space craft, locations, etc.), data acquisition/instrumentation (e.g. remote sensing detectors, in-situ measurements, etc.), transmission (e.g. telemetry, recording, etc.) and analysis (e.g. data environments, virtual observatories, modeling, etc.)?
Community Input (RFA) • Community input was captured during breakout sessions, open mic sessions, e-mail, poster sessions, and quad-chart submissions. • In general the RFA statements from the 2005 Roadmap were endorsed with many suggested re-wordings. The associated text in the RM was critical to understanding the scope of the RFA statement. No substantive omissions were identified, however the text should reflect recent discoveries. • Future science directions in Heliophysics are well covered by the existing RFAs, however, the spirit of discovery needs to be more explicit.
Community Input – Recent Advances • Justin Kasper solicited inputs from the operating missions and prepared a spread sheet on recent accomplishments. Additions still being added. This information will form the basis for a new chapter on recent accomplishments in the RM. Some examples include: • Measurements of reconnection, including in situ in the solar wind and in the magnetosphere, together with improved simulations. 3-D structure of reconnection. • Better far-side observations of the Sun • Observations of lower atmosphere drives of upper atmosphere variability as source of ITM variability • Termination shock observations • STEREO observations - CME propagation from the Sun to the earth. • Hinode testing loop models
Community Input – Open Mic • People generally expressed support for their areas of research, as expected. Some random issues raised: • Importance of theory and modeling • Interstellar precursor • Maintenance of the Great Observatory • Failure of NASA to follow previous RM launch queues • How to prioritize science targets? • Value of partnerships
Community Input – Mission Quad Charts • 34 charts were submitted prior to the meeting and several have been received since. • These missions and those in the 2005 RM are intended for use as a basis for the engineering studies of reference missions.