Sylph - A SmallSat Probe Concept Engineered to Answer Europa's Big Question

Europa, the Galilean satellite second from Jupiter, contains a vast, subsurface ocean of liquid water. Recent observations indicate possible plume activity. If such a plume expels ocean water into space as at Enceladus, a spacecraft could directly sample the ocean by analyzing the plume’s water vapor, ice, and grains. Due to Europa’s strong gravity, such sampling would have to be done within 5 km of the surface to sample ice grains larger than 5 μm, expected to be frozen ocean spray and thus to contain non-volatile species critical to a biosignature-detection mission. By contrast, the planned Europa Multiple Flyby Mission’s closest planned flyby altitude is 25 km. Sylph is a concept for a SmallSat free-flyer probe that, deployed from the planned Europa Mission, would directly sample the large grains by executing a single ~2-km altitude plume pass. The 40-kg probe would be deployed by the Europa mission just before it executes a plume fly-through. Within the probe’s 16-hour lifespan, it would autonomously navigate to perform a parallel, simultaneous pass at the lower altitude. The Sylph flight system design concept combines SmallSat technologies with robust traditional components and advanced manufacturing technologies. Its payload would be composed of the Mini-SUDA (SUrface Dust Mass Analyzer) instrument, a dual-channel, miniature impact ionization mass spectrometer. Sylph represents a novel type of SmallSat concept: purpose-built configuration, optimized for the harsh environment at Europa and for planetary-protection requirements, and hybridized from both mainstream and SmallSat components.