Dolores Beasley
Headquarters, Washington
April 17, 2002
(Phone: 202/358-1753)

RELEASE: 02-69

NASA SELECTS EXPLORER MISSION PROPOSALS FOR FEASIBILITY STUDIES

Mission proposals that would discover the brightest galaxy in the universe, measure the chemical building blocks of life, track magnetic storms in the Earth's magnetosphere and study massive explosions on the Sun were recently selected by NASA as candidates for the next missions in the agency's Explorer Program of lower cost, highly focused, rapid-development scientific spacecraft.

NASA has also decided to fund as a "Mission of Opportunity" U.S. participation in a European Space Agency (ESA) observatory on the International Space Station.

Following detailed mission concept studies, NASA intends to select two of the mission proposals by early 2003 for full development as Medium-class Explorer, or MIDEX, flights. The two missions developed for flight will be launched in 2007 and 2008.

"The MIDEX program provides an excellent opportunity to explore fundamental questions of science and technology," said Dr. Ed Weiler, associate administrator for space science at NASA Headquarters, Washington. "The missions we've chosen fully support NASA's vision to understand and protect our home planet, to explore the universe and to search for life."

The selected proposals were judged to have the best science value among 42 proposals submitted to NASA in October 2001. Each will receive $450,000 ($250,000 for the Mission of Opportunity) to conduct a four-month implementation feasibility study. The selected MIDEX proposals are:

NASA also selected an investigation to be flown on the International Space Station in partnership with the European Space Agency. At the end of the study, NASA will make a final decision on participating in the ESA-led mission. The Extreme Universe Space Observatory (EUSO) would detect the highest- energy cosmic rays known by using the entire Earth as a particle detector. As extremely energetic particles pass through the Earth's atmosphere they emit a form of blue light that that would be observed by EUSO's large telescope from its vantage point on the ISS. EUSO is under study by ESA for flight on the Columbus module of the ISS, and NASA would provide the large Fresnal lens for the telescope. NASA's contribution to EUSO would be led by James H. Adams Jr. of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala., at a total mission cost to NASA of $21 million.

NASA also selected a proposed mission for technology- development funding of the proposed instrument. Stephan S. Meyer of the University of Chicago will develop a frequency- selective bolometer to study dusty galaxies in the early universe from a balloon-borne telescope over Antarctica. Meyer will receive $500,000 over the next two years for his study.

The current MIDEX missions are the Imager for Magnetopause- to-Aurora Global Exploration (IMAGE), launched in March 2000, and the Microwave Anisotropy Probe (MAP), launched in June 2001. The third MIDEX mission is the Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Explorer which will be launched in September 2003. The Explorer Program is designed to provide frequent, low-cost access to space for physics and astronomy missions with small to mid-sized spacecraft. The Explorer Program is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., for the Office of Space Science, Washington.

More information on the Explorer program is available here.


MIDEX Downselect Page

NASA Headquarters Responsible Office: Code SZ
Last Updated: 11 May 2002
Author: Paul Hertz (Code SZ)