The Titan Mare Explorer would undergo a 7-year simple interplanetary cruise with no flyby science. Some science measurements would be made during entry and descent, but data transmissions would begin only after
splashdown. The science objectives of the mission are: • Determine the chemistry of a Titan sea.
Instruments:
Mass Spectrometer (MS), Meteorology and Physical Properties Package (MP3). • Determine the depth of a Titan sea.
Instrument: Meteorology and Physical Properties Package (Sonar) (MP3). • Constrain marine processes on Titan.
Instrument: Meteorology and Physical Properties Package (MP3), Descent and surface cameras. • Determine how the local meteorology over the sea varies on diurnal timescales.
Instrument: Meteorology and Physical Properties Package (MP3), cameras. • Characterize the atmosphere above the sea.
Instrument: Meteorology and Physical Properties Package (MP3), cameras.
Malin Space Science Systems, which builds and operates camera systems for spacecraft, signed an early development contract with NASA to conduct preliminary design studies. There would be two cameras. One would take pictures during the descent to the surface of Ligeia Mare, and the other would take pictures after landing. A Meteorology and Physical Properties Package (MP3) would be built by the
Applied Physics Laboratory (APL). This instrument package would measure wind speed and direction, methane humidity, pressure and temperature above the 'waterline', and turbidity, sea temperature, speed of sound and dielectric properties below the surface. A sonar would measure the sea depth. Acoustic propagation simulations were performed and sonar transducers were tested at liquid-nitrogen temperatures to characterize their performance at Titan conditions. == Power source ==