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Europa Clipper Conducts Critical Mars Flyby for Instrument Calibration

by Clarence Oxford
TECHNOLOGY NEWS
Commercial UAV Expo | Sept 2-4, 2025 | Las Vegas

Los Angeles CA (SPX) May 13, 2025
NASA's Europa Clipper spacecraft, currently en route to Jupiter's moon Europa, recently utilized a close flyby of Mars to calibrate its critical infrared imaging system. The maneuver, conducted on March 1, positioned the spacecraft just 550 miles (884 kilometers) above the Martian surface, using the planet's gravity to adjust its trajectory for a more efficient journey to Jupiter.

The flyby provided a valuable opportunity for the mission team to test the Europa Thermal Imaging System (E-THEMIS), the spacecraft's primary thermal mapping instrument. During an 18-minute imaging session, E-THEMIS captured over 1,000 grayscale images, later colorized to highlight temperature variations, with warmer regions shown in red and cooler areas in blue. This extensive data set will be compared against existing Mars observations from NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter to verify the instrument's calibration.

"We wanted no surprises in these new images," said Phil Christensen, E-THEMIS principal investigator at Arizona State University. "The goal was to capture imagery of a planetary body we know extraordinarily well and make sure the dataset looks exactly the way it should, based on 20 years of instruments documenting Mars."

Europa Clipper's primary mission at Jupiter will focus on mapping the temperatures of Europa's icy surface to identify areas of recent geological activity and assess the moon's potential habitability. The infrared data will help pinpoint regions where the subsurface ocean may be interacting with the ice shell, offering clues about the potential for life.

The Mars flyby also allowed the spacecraft to conduct a full systems test of its radar instruments for the first time. These components, including long-wavelength antennas, could not be fully tested before launch. Initial assessments suggest the tests went smoothly, with final data expected in the coming months.

In addition to these critical instrument checks, the flyby served as a rehearsal for future gravity experiments at Europa, confirming that the spacecraft's telecommunications equipment can handle precise measurements of gravitational interactions.

Europa Clipper, launched on Oct. 14, 2024, aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy from Kennedy Space Center, is on a 1.8 billion-mile (2.9 billion-kilometer) journey to Jupiter, set to arrive in 2030. Its next gravity assist will come from Earth in 2026, helping to refine its path toward the distant ice-covered moon.

Europa Clipper is expected to conduct 49 close flybys of Europa, studying its surface and subsurface to evaluate its potential to support life.

Research Report:Europa Thermal Imaging System (E-THEMIS)

Related Links
Europa Clipper
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more



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