Dragonfly (New Frontiers 4) Dragonfly will send a mobile robotic
rotorcraft to Saturn's biggest moon
Titan The development cost cap is approximately $1 billion. As of June 2024,
Dragonfly is scheduled for launch in July 2028. The competition for the fourth mission began in January 2017. NASA's announcement of opportunity was limited to six mission themes: five recommended by the 2011 Decadal Survey, and a sixth, "Ocean Worlds" that encompassed either Titan or Enceladus related missions that had not been included in the survey's recommendations: ;Comet Surface Sample Return: •
Comet Nucleus Dust and Organics Return (CONDOR), to retrieve a sample from
67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko. •
Comet Rendezvous, Sample Acquisition, Investigation, and Return (CORSAIR) would sample comet
88P/Howell. •
Comet Astrobiology Exploration Sample Return (CAESAR) to comet
67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko ;Lunar South Pole Sample Return: •
MoonRise, a sample return mission to explore the lunar
South Pole–Aitken basin •
Dragonfly, a rotorcraft that would fly over the landscape and oceans of Titan to study prebiotic chemistry. •
Enceladus Life Finder (ELF), an astrobiology orbiter to Enceladus. •
Enceladus Life Signatures and Habitability (ELSAH) ;Saturn Probe: •
Saturn PRobe Interior and aTmosphere Explorer (SPRITE), an atmospheric probe to investigate Saturn's atmosphere and composition. ;Trojan Tour and Rendezvous: • None ;Venus Lander •
Venus In Situ Atmospheric and Geochemical Explorer (VISAGE), a
Venus atmospheric probe and lander. •
Venus In situ Composition Investigations (VICI), a lander. •
Venus Origins Explorer (VOX), a Venus orbiter. Out of 12 initial proposals, NASA selected two for additional concept studies on 20 December 2017, including
Dragonfly. The two finalists,
CAESAR and
Dragonfly, each received $4 million funding through the end of 2018 to further develop and mature their concepts. On June 27, 2019, NASA announced the selection of
Dragonfly as the New Frontiers 4 mission for a launch in 2026, later delayed to July 2028. With the addition of the Ocean Worlds theme following the 2011 survey and the selection of Dragonfly as NF-4 in 2019, this left the list of eligible themes for NF-5 as: • Comet Surface Sample Return • Io Observer • Lunar Geophysical Network • Lunar South Pole-Aitken Basin Sample Return • Ocean Worlds (only Enceladus); • Saturn Probe; and • Venus In-Situ Explorer The 2018 Midterm Review of the 2013–2022 Decadal Survey found that NASA was falling behind on the two-mission-per-decade cadence, and recommended the release of the New Frontiers 5 Announcement of Opportunity no later than December 2021.
Thomas Zurbuchen, Associate Administrator for the
Science Mission Directorate, responded positively to the Midterm Review's recommendation, stating that NASA was "committed to conducting two New Frontiers competitions per decade" and planned to release the Announcement of Opportunity in 2021 or 2022, though the Midterm Review estimated a release date as late as 2023. NASA released the draft of the Announcement of Opportunity New Frontiers 5 on January 10, 2023. 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 New Frontiers 5 would be delayed to no earlier than 2026. The further delay in New Frontiers 5 selection caused the New Frontiers 5 timeframe to now overlap with the timeframe previously expected for New Frontiers 6, and raised questions about whether the recommendations of the 2011 or 2022 Decadal Surveys ought to drive the mission selection priorities. NASA requested that the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine investigate and report on any scientific, programmatic, and technological advances that have a significant impact on the mission themes prioritized for the New Frontiers 5 selection. On February 25, 2025 a Consensus Study Report was released recommending a revised list of eligible mission themes for New Frontiers 5 that proposed removing two themes from the original list (Lunar South Pole-Aitken Basin Sample Return, citing overlapping objectives with the
Endurance-A mission; and Venus In-Situ Explorer, citing programmatic balance given the
DAVINCI,
VERITAS and
EnVision missions) and pulling forward two themes from the New Frontiers 6 list (Centaur Orbiter and Lander and Ceres Sample Return), leaving the following recommended eligible themes for New Frontiers 5: • Centaur Orbiter and Lander • Ceres Sample Return • Comet Surface Sample Return • Enceladus Multiple Flyby • Io Observer • Lunar Geophysical Network; and • Saturn Probe
New Frontiers 6 and 7 New Frontiers 6 is expected to continue to use the 2022 Decadal Survey theme list. Relative to the recommended revised New Frontiers 5 theme list, this would add two further missions themes not endorsed for earlier launch due to relatively contemporaneous missions to Titan and Venus and exclude what may be selected for New Frontiers 5: • Centaur Orbiter and Lander • Ceres Sample Return • Comet Surface Sample Return • Enceladus Multiple Flyby • Lunar Geophysical Network; • Saturn Probe; • Titan Orbiter; and • Venus In-Situ Explorer New Frontiers 7 is also anticipated to continue to use the 2022 Decadal Survey theme list, consisting of any of the New Frontiers 6 candidate themes not selected in New Frontiers 5 or 6, with the addition of a "Triton Ocean Worlds Surveyor" mission theme. However, given NASA's reduced cadence it is possible that another Decadal Survey will have been completed by the time the mission selection process begins. ==See also==