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Finding Genius Podcast

Mission to Mercury — Elsa Montagnon, BepiColombo Spacecraft Operations Manager — Discoveries in Space, Answering Questions About Mercury's Chemical Composition and Magnetosphere

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 18 January 2019

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Elsa Montagnon, BepiColombo Spacecraft Operations Manager, discusses the latest mission to Mercury, its complexity, and what scientists hope to discover.


Elsa Montagnon is an interplanetary spacecraft operations expert. She earned her engineering degrees from the Ecole Centrale Paris and Technical University of Munich. Montagnon joined the European Space Agency (ESA) in 1999. Before her work as the BepiColombo spacecraft operations manager, Montagnon was the flight operations system engineer on ESA's groundbreaking Rosetta mission. The European Space Agency (ESA) is Europe's premier, advanced agency that serves as the entrée to space. The ESA formats and oversees the development of Europe's space capability to track progress and make sure that the investment in space is properly benefitting the people of Europe as well as the world community.


Montagnon discusses ESA's collaboration with a partner Japanese space agency, JAXA, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. She gives an overview of the BepiColombo's mission: to explore planet Mercury. She states that Mercury was visited twice before by man-made machines, missions that introduced many questions for researchers as would be expected. She details the importance of putting satellites into different orbits to maximize their findings. Their mission intends to launch a lower orbit survey of the chemical composition of Mercury's surface, etc., with JAXA's higher orbit survey satellite that will analyze the magnetosphere and other important issues. A magnetosphere is a region of space that surrounds an astronomical object in which various charged particles are manipulated or impacted by that object's overall magnetic field.


She explains some of the difficulties with a mission to Mercury, due to its close proximity to the sun and the complex trajectory needed to make the journey there. She describes the year-by-year trajectory that must be made in order to approach Mercury, specifically discussing energy and orbit. Survival itself is a challenge in such a high-temperature environment. Near Mercury, the energy from the sun is approximately ten times that of what we experience on Earth. As such, much research and effort goes into coatings and thermal blankets that are absolutely necessary to protect any craft that is approaching Mercury due to the excessive temperature.


The space-engineering expert discusses some of the extra advantages of a Mercury mission, such as the ability to study solar flares and gather new information about the sun. Montagnon explains that the latest mission has literally just begun and that the Mercury arrival will not happen until 2025. She discusses the technical aspects of some of the instruments that will be utilized during the mission, and how they track the mission and the data. Montagnon states that there is a full laboratory on board that allows for exploration and discovery, as scientists seek to take full advantage of every aspect of the mission from beginning to end, from capturing never-before seen views of Venus and other important mission activities. 

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're listening to the Future Tech Podcast with Richard Jenkins.

0:09.0

Future Technologies such as Artificial Intelligence,

0:12.0

stem cells, 3D printing, gene editing,

0:14.8

Bitcoin, blockchain, the microbiome, quantum computing, virtual reality, and exploring

0:20.8

space are much closer than you might think.

0:23.0

In fact, many early versions of these technologies are in play right now

0:27.0

and the companies that are using these technologies

0:30.0

to the focus of this podcast.

0:32.0

My goal for you, the listener, is to learn from these

0:34.5

podcasts. You may very well learn something that may change the course of your life

0:38.4

for the better, steer you towards a new career, or give you insight into addressing a thorny medical problem.

0:44.6

Remember, this podcast is informationational and nature only.

0:48.8

No medical, tax, legal, financial, or psychological advice is being given.

0:53.0

If you enjoyed the podcast, please listen, subscribe, like, and tell your friends about it.

0:58.0

Thank you. Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Future Tech Podcast. I have Elsa Montagnan, she's the Bethi Colombo Spacecraft Operations Manager. This is a joint venture

1:16.9

with ESA, the European Space Agency, and another agency. And I've spoken to a number of people at ESA. They're a very

1:24.0

gracious agency. I've probably spoken to people at the agency

1:28.3

to six seven times, you know, always super interesting stuff they're working on.

1:32.4

So Elsa, welcome, thanks for coming. always super interesting stuff they're working on.

1:33.0

So Elsa, welcome, thanks for coming to the podcast.

1:36.0

Thank you very much. I'm very happy to talk to you today.

1:39.0

Yes, this appears to be a joint venture between ESA and another organization.

...

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