Discovery 1 and 2 (1997) The first two Discovery missions were
Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) (later called Shoemaker NEAR) and
Mars Pathfinder. These initial missions did not follow the same selection process that started once the program was under-way.
Mars Pathfinder was salvaged from the idea for a technology and EDL demonstrator from the
Mars Environmental Survey program. A series of proposals limited to missions to a near-Earth asteroid missions were reviewed in 1991.
Discovery 3 and 4 In August 1994, NASA made an Announcement of Opportunity for the next proposed Discovery missions. There were 28 proposals submitted to NASA in October 1994: • Jovian Integrated Synoptic Telescope (IO Torus investigation) • Lunar Discovery Orbiter • • Mainbelt Asteroid Exploration/Rendezvous • Mars Aerial Platform (Atmospheric) • Mars Polar Pathfinder (Polar Lander) • Mars Upper Atmosphere Dynamics, Energetics and Evolution • Mercury Polar Flyby • Near Earth Asteroid Returned Sample • Origin of Asteroids, Comets and Life on Earth • PELE: A Lunar Mission to Study Planetary Volcanism • Planetary Research Telescope • Rendezvous with a Comet Nucleus (RECON) • • Small Missions to Asteroids and Comets • • Venus Composition Probe (Atmospheric) • Venus Environmental Satellite (Atmospheric) • In February 1995,
Lunar Prospector, a lunar orbiter mission, was selected for launch. Three other missions were left to undergo a further selection later in 1995 for the fourth Discovery mission:
Stardust,
Suess-Urey, and
Venus Multiprobe.
Discovery 5 and 6 In October 1997, NASA selected
Genesis and
CONTOUR as the next Discovery missions, out of 34 proposals that were submitted in December 1996. The five finalists were: • Aladdin (Mars moon sample return) • Comet Nucleus Tour (
CONTOUR) •
Genesis (Solar wind sample return) • Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry and Ranging mission (
MESSENGER) • Venus Environmental Satellite (VESAT)
Discovery 7 and 8 In July 1999, NASA selected
MESSENGER and
Deep Impact as the next Discovery Program missions. Both missions targeted a launch in late 2004 and the cost was constrained at about US$300 million each. The five proposals were selected out of about 30 with the goal of achieving the best science.
INSIDE Jupiter was similar to a later New Frontiers mission called
Juno;
Dawn was a mission to asteroids
Vesta and
Ceres, and
Kepler was a space telescope mission aimed to discover
extrasolar planets. The three finalists received US$450,000 to further mature the mission concept. In December 2001, Kepler and
Dawn were selected for flight. At this time, only 80 exoplanets had been detected, and the main mission of Kepler to look for more exoplanets, especially Earth-sized. Both
Kepler and
Dawn were initially projected for launch in 2006.
Discovery 11 The original Announcement of Opportunity for a Discovery mission released on April 16, 2004. The only candidate for selection for a concept Phase A study was JASSI, which was a Jupiter flyby mission based on the New Frontiers Mission Juno that was already under consideration for final selection (eventually Juno was selected as the 2nd New Frontiers mission in 2005 and launched in 2011). No other discovery mission proposed in response to the Announcement of Opportunity was considered for concept study and therefore no Discovery mission was selected for this opportunity (although a mission of opportunity was selected (Moon Mineralogy Mapper) as part of the AO in 2004). The next Announcement of Opportunity for a Discovery mission was released on January 3, 2006. There were three finalists for this Discovery selection including
GRAIL (the eventual winner), OSIRIS, and VESPER. OSIRIS was very similar to the later
OSIRIS-REx mission, an asteroid sample-return mission to
101955 Bennu, and
Vesper, a Venus orbiter mission. In November 2007 NASA selected the GRAIL mission as the next Discovery mission, with a goal of mapping lunar gravity and a 2011 launch. There were 23 other proposals that were also under consideration. Out of the 28 proposals, three finalists received US$3 million in May 2011 to develop a detailed concept study: •
InSight, a Mars lander. •
Titan Mare Explorer (TiME), a lake lander for
Saturn's moon
Titan with methane-ethane lakes. •
Comet Hopper (CHopper) to study cometary evolution by landing on a comet multiple times and observing its changes as it interacts with the Sun. In August 2012,
InSight was selected for development and launch. The mission launched on May 5, 2018, and successfully landed on Mars on November 26.
Discovery 13 and 14 In February 2014, NASA released a Discovery Program 'Draft Announcement of Opportunity' for launch readiness date of December 31, 2021. The final AO was released on November 5, 2014, and on September 30, 2015, NASA selected five mission concepts as finalists, each received $3 million for one-year of further study and concept refinement. •
Deep Atmosphere Venus Investigation of Noble gases, Chemistry, and Imaging (DAVINCI) •
Venus Emissivity, Radio Science, InSAR Topography and Spectroscopy (VERITAS) •
Near-Earth Object Camera (NEOCam) •
Lucy •
Psyche On January 4, 2017,
Lucy and
Psyche were selected for the 13th and 14th Discovery missions, respectively and launched on 16 October 2021 and 13 October 2023, respectively.
Lucy will fly by five
Jupiter trojans,
asteroids which share Jupiter's
orbit around the
Sun, orbiting either ahead of or behind the planet. The final Announcement of Opportunity was released on April 1, 2019, and proposal submissions were accepted between then and July 1, 2019. Finalists, announced on February 13, 2020, were: •
DAVINCI (Deep Atmosphere Venus Investigation of Noble gases, Chemistry, and Imaging), a Venus atmospheric probe. •
Io Volcano Observer, an orbiter to Jupiter to perform at least nine flybys of Jupiter's volcanically active moon
Io. •
Trident, a probe that would conduct a flyby of
Neptune and its moon
Triton. •
VERITAS (Venus Emissivity, Radio Science, InSAR, Topography, and Spectroscopy), a Venus orbiter to map the surface of Venus in high resolution. On June 2, 2021, NASA administrator
Bill Nelson announced in his "State of NASA" address that the two Venus missions,
VERITAS and
DAVINCI, had been selected for development. The two missions will launch between 2031 and 2032. •
Chimera, a mission concept to orbit the highly active
Centaur 29P/
Schwassmann-Wachmann 1, to study the evolutionary middle ground between the
Trans Neptunian Objects (TNOs) and Jupiter Family Comets. • FOSSIL (Fragments from the Origins of the Solar System and our Interstellar Locale), a spacecraft to be placed in an Earth-trailing orbit to determine the composition of the local and
interplanetary dust cloud. •
MANTIS (Main-belt Asteroid and NEO Tour with Imaging and Spectroscopy), a mission that would flyby 14 asteroids covering a wide range of types and masses. ;Venus: • HOVER (Hyperspectral Observer for Venus Reconnaissance), a Venus orbiter that would perform spectral studies from the top of the atmosphere to the surface. Its main goal is understanding the mechanics of the Venus climate and atmospheric super-rotation. ;Moon: •
Moon Diver, a lunar lander which would deploy a rover to rappel down a deep pit, analyzing the exposed geological layers and investigate if the pit connects to a
lava tube. •
Lunar Compass Rover, a rover designed to explore a nearside magnetic region and
swirl, and would answer some questions in planetary science, including planetary magnetism,
space plasma physics, space weathering, planetary geology, and the
lunar water cycle. A proposal for Lunar Compass was not submitted to this Discovery round. •
ISOCHRON (Inner SOlar system CHRONology), a mission that would perform a robotic lunar sample-return of the youngest
mare basalts. • NanoSWARM, a lunar orbiter to investigate
lunar swirls, space weathering,
lunar water, lunar magnetism, and small-scale magnetospheres. ;Mars • COMPASS (Climate Orbiter for Mars Polar Atmospheric and Subsurface Science) is a mission concept for a Mars orbiter to research the Martian climate record through the study of its ice deposits and their interaction with current climate. This mission is led by the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory at the University of Arizona and the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado, Boulder. ;Jupiter • MAGIC (Magnetics, Altimetry, Gravity and Imaging of Callisto) is an orbiter reconnaissance concept to Jupiter's moon
Callisto.
Discovery 17 and beyond On August 24, 2023, NASA announced that due to budgetary constraints enacted through the
Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, the official release of the Announcement of Opportunity for the
fifth mission in the Discovery Program's "big sibling" program, New Frontiers, would be delayed to no earlier than 2026. In October 2023, Planetary Science Division Director
Lori Glaze presented to the National Academies' Committee on Astrobiology and Planetary Science on the implications of these resource constraints, noting that there were unlikely to be solicitations for further Discovery missions until at least 2026 either. ==Gallery==