Click here to go straight to the detailed agenda with presentation files.
Click here to read or download the IPPW-2018 Printed Program.
Below you will find similar information in the printed program, including instructions and info for posters and oral presenters,detailed descriptions of the 9 Technical Sessions, andthe detailed Program Agenda with embedded presentation files. For information on the Short Course, please click the menu link or link below to visit that page.
June 9-10 (Sat-Sun), 2018: Short Course on Small Satellites: An Emerging Paradigm for Bold Planetary Exploration
June 11-15 (Mon-Fri), 2018: IPPW-2018
- Review the Technical Session Descriptions
- Take me to the detailed Program Agenda with Presentation Files
Posters & Oral Presenter Info:
- Instructions:Click here to download the IPPW-2018 Poster & Oral Presentation Instructions (with list of local printers)
- Posters: See which Short Talk Group you're in by downloading the list of posters.
Important Dates:
- February 5, 2018: IPPW Registration Opens
- February 5, 2018: Abstract Submission Opens
- March 16, 2018: Abstract Submission Deadline
- April 6, 2018: Acceptance Letters Sent Out
- April 10, 2018: Student Scholarship Awardees are Notified
- May 1, 2018: Preliminary Program
- June 1, 2018: Final Program
- June 7, 2018: Deadline for Presentation Submissions (for accepted presenters)
Main Workshop Technical Sessions:
- Inner Solar System Exploration -- Monday, June 13, 1:30pm:
The Inner Solar System Exploration Session will focus on past, present, and future exploration of Venus, Earth, and Mars. Topics may include missions, science, technology, and systems dealing with the in-situ exploration of the rocky planets, such as landers or entry probes. Contributions to this session can address aspects such as atmospheric science and environment characterization, robotic and human EDL, and sample return.
- Demonstration and Flight Testing -- Tuesday, June 12, 8:30am:
Ground demonstration and flight testing in relevant environments are critical to the development of technologies for planetary probe missions. Specific topics sought include testing that demonstrates technology capability in aerodynamic performance; aerothermodynamic survivability; material response; propulsion; and guidance, navigation, and control. Other desired topics include demonstrations of manufacturing and assembly of probe technologies, novel testing techniques, new instrumentation approaches, and new ground test capabilities.Emphasis should be placed on technologies and flight systems that enable current and future missions and mission concepts.
- Aerosciences and Entry Technology -- Tuesday, June 12, 1:30pm:
Probe missions to a planetary body with an atmosphere involve aerodynamically decelerating the probe using entry technologies to successfully complete the entry phase and to prepare for descent and landing. For example, heatshields must be designed to withstand severe heating environments as the vehicle is decelerated via hypersonic aerobraking or entry through the atmosphere. This session will cover current engineering techniques, physics, and technologies that enhance and enable atmospheric aerobraking or entry missions, such as: entry vehicle and thermal protection system design; methods for assessing aerothermal environments, thermal and structural response, and aerodynamic performance; specific implementation concepts such as supersonic retropropulsion, inflatable/deployable heatshields, and systems/methods that improve entry control/guidance. Cross-cutting/multidisciplinary topics related to this theme are also encouraged.
- Descent and Landing Technology -- Wednesday, June 13, 8:30am:
The objective of various technologies used during descent and landing phases of EDL are to dissipate the kinetic energy of a spacecraft that remains from the entry phase of flight, while also directing the vehicle to its target landing conditions and making final preparations for landing. This session is focused on the engineering and technology of these EDL phases and will cover topic areas that include, but are not limited to, aerodynamic decelerators, supersonic retropropulsion, GN&C strategies, navigation sensors, terrain relative sensing and characterization, autonomous targeting, propulsion and touchdown systems, architecture transitions, and instrumentation.
- Instrumentation and Experiments -- Wednesday, June 13, 11:15am:
In-situ planetary science measurements are fundamental to our understanding of the solar system. This session covers the development and implementation of past, present and future science and engineering instrumentation for probes exploring planets, moons and other small bodies. Engineering and science are brought together in this session to discuss the fundamental goals, requirements and challenges of instruments and experiments, understand the practical limitations of data collection from in situ or remote sensing techniques and share lessons learned from instrument development or implementation activities.
- Modeling, Simulation, and Validation -- Thursday, June 14, 8:30am:
This session will focus on modeling and simulation advancements for planetary probes including: entry, descent and landing (EDL), computational fluid dynamics (CFD), guidance, navigation and control (GNC), materials and thermal protection systems (TPS) modeling, decelerator systems, surface operations, integrated/optimized capabilities, and related disciplines. Current work in testing and demonstration techniques, model validation, and diagnostics, are also a major component of this session. Work that is advancing the state-of-the-art of the current capabilities or technologies, or comparing or leveraging both testing and computational models including data-driven modeling, is especially relevant.
- Lunar and Small Body Exploration -- Thursday, June 14, 1:30pm:
Lunar and small body exploration has the potential to provide insight into our own planet and the evolution of our solar system. This session will focus on current and future missions, descent and landing architectures, and science and instrumentation related to this mission class.
Lunar exploration has had a regain of interest in the recent years both from agencies and private businesses. It is expected to continue and even increase in the coming years. Specific aspects of enabling descent and landing technologies in support of future missions and architectures (including polar exploration, rover deployment, human surface activity preparation and exploration) shall be discussed. In addition, discussions on scientific data return, commercial applications and enablers as well as international collaboration and framework are also welcome to the session.
Small body exploration is a growing mission class that has unique scientific potential. Small airless bodies are being targeted for learning about the solar system's origin, evolutionary processes that led to the formation of the planets, as well as the search of primitive classes of organics that can shed light on the origin of life. The large number of future mission concepts, planned missions, and missions under way to their respective targets emphasize the continued great interest in airless bodies and promise to unveil many mysteries.
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Small and CubeSat Probes -- Thursday, June 14, 4:15pm:
This session invites abstracts on mission concepts, scientific instruments and new technologies for small spacecraft or CubeSat probes. Small probes can augment a primary spacecraft's science mission. They may also stand alone as their own mission by reducing life-cycle costs or by increasing spacecraft quantity. They can perform remote sensing and/or in-situ measurements, be used as landing platforms for technological demonstrations.
- Outer Solar System Exploration -- Friday, June 15, 8:30am:
The outer solar system comprises the gas and ice giant planets and a multitude of icy worlds. The giant planets represent time capsules from the epoch of solar system formation. Within the atmospheres and interiors of the giant planets, fingerprints of the chemical and physical conditions existing at the time and location at which each planet formed and the processes by which the giant planets and the solar system formed can be found. In situ measurements of giant planet atmospheric composition and processes help constrain models of solar system formation and evolution, the origin and evolution of atmospheres, and the large-scale structure of the solar system including the Earth.
Icy worlds in the outer solar system include the satellites of the giant planets, comets, asteroids, KBOs, and the Pluto system. The icy worlds represent laboratories for understanding surface geochemistries, and geophysical and atmospheric chemistries and processes including atmospheric thermal and energy structure and dynamics, as well as having compositions that help constrain models of solar system formation and evolution. The prospect of subsurface oceans on a number of the icy worlds as potentially habitable environments has exciting implications for astrobiology. The in-situ exploration of these ocean worlds such as Europa, Titan, and Enceladus could offer important clues to answer the fundamental question of whether life exists elsewhere in the universe.
The Outer Solar System Exploration session solicits presentations addressing concepts for possible future outer solar system atmospheric and/or surface contact missions (incl. the outer planets, their moons, and other icy worlds), and technologies and instrumentation designed to enable exploration of the extreme environments found in the outer solar system.
Program Agenda
Monday, 11 June 2018
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8:00am: Continental Breakfast & Check-in
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9:00am: Local Organizing Committee (LOC) Welcome -- Bobby Braun, Co-Chair, LOC; Dean, College of Engineering & Applied Science, ; IPPW Al Seiff Memorial Award Recipient, 2012
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9:05am: International Organizing Committee (IOC) Welcome -- Bernie Bienstock, Chair, IOC; Proposal Manager, Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL)
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9:20am: IPPW-2018 Program Overview & Guidelines -- Co-Chairs, Program Organizing Committee (POC): Robert Buchwald (Airbus),Ashley Korzun (NASA Langley), Rodrigo Haya Ramos (SENER)
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9:30am: Al Seiff Award Presentation to Sushil Atreya (UMich)-- Helen Hwang, Chair, Al Seiff Award Nomination Committee (NASA Ames Research Center)
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9:45am: Keynote Talk: NASA's Planetary Programs & Technology -- DavidSchurr, Deputy Director, Planetary Science Division, NASA HQ
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10:30am: Coffee Break - Sponsored by Roccor
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11:00am: Keynote Talk: Advancing Technology for NASA Science with Small Spacecraft-- Mike Seablom, Chief Technologist, Science Mission Directorate, NASA HQ
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11:30am: Keynote Talk:Spores, viable organisms, and other tribulations in planetary protection requirements for Mars and Europa-- Lisa Pratt, Planetary Protection Officer, NASA HQ
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12:00pm:Keynote Talk: IPPW-Enabled International Collaborations in EDL: Lessons Learned and Recommendations -- Ethiraj Venkatapathy (NASA Ames) & Ali Gülhan (DLR)
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12:30pm: Lunch
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1:30pm: Workshop Session 1: Inner Solar System Exploration -- Conveners: Brooke Harper (JPL), David Mimoun (ISAE), Ashley Korzun (NASA Langley)
- 1:30pm: Invited Talk: Human Mars Architecture -- Tara Polsgrove, Human Mars Study Team, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
- 2:00pm: Status of theInSightEntry, Descent, and Landing System -- Brooke Harper, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 2:14pm: Venus Aerial Platform Studies -- James Cutts, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 2:28pm: Aerial Platform Options for Venus -- Jeffery Hall, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 2:42pm: Balloon-borne Infrasound as a Remote Sensing Tool for Venus: Progress in 2017 -- Siddharth Krishnamoorthy, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 2:56pm: (Student Presentation) Analysis for Lithium-combustion Power Systems for Extreme Environment Spacecraft -- Christopher Greer, Pennsylvania State University
- 3:10pm: Post-Flight Analysis of the Radio Doppler Shifts of the ExoMars Schiaparelli Lander -- Ozgur Karatekin, Royal Observatory of Belgium
- 1:30pm: Invited Talk: Human Mars Architecture -- Tara Polsgrove, Human Mars Study Team, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
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3:24pm: Poster Short Talks I(view the list of Poster Presenters here)
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3:45pm: Coffee Break - Sponsored by Virgin Orbit
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4:15pm: Workshop Session 1 Cont'd: Inner Solar System Exploration
- 4:15pm: Mars 2020 Entry, Descent, and Landing Update -- Erisa Stilley, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 4:29pm: Recent Developments for an Orbiting Sample Container for Potential Mars Sample Return -- Aaron Siddens, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 4:43pm: Changing Entry, Descent, and Landing Paradigms for Human Mars Landers -- Alicia Dwyer Cianciolo, NASA Langley Research Center
- 4:57pm: Inner Solar System Session Q&A
- 5:10pm: We Need Your Help! The Planetary Probe Blue Book Refresh -- Todd White, NASA Ames Research Center
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5:15pm: Poster Short Talks II(view the list of Poster Presenters here)
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5:50pm: Transfer to Welcome Reception Venue: Chautauqua Dining Hall(transportation from workshop venue is provided;individual driving is discouraged because of severely limited parking at venue)
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6:30pm: Welcome Reception at Chautauqua Dining Hall - Sponsored by Lockheed Martin
Tuesday, 12 June2018
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8:00am: Continental Breakfast
- 8:30am: Workshop Session 2: Demonstration & Flight Testing -- Conveners: Robert Dillman (NASA Langley), Brandon Smith (NASA Ames), Alan Cassell (NASA Ames)
- 8:30am: 'More Honoured in the Breach?' Test-as-you-fly Environments for Planetary In-Situ Missions -- Ralph Lorenz, JHU Applied Physics Laboratory
- 8:44am: (Student Presentation) ExoMars Schiaparelli Flight Trajectory and Atmospheric Reconstruction -- Bart Van Hove, Royal Observatory of Belgium
- 8:58am: Overview of Orion Aerodynamics: Database Development and Flight Test Comparisons -- Karen Bibb, NASA Langley Research Center
- 9:26am: Overview of the first two flights of the ASPIRE Supersonic Parachute Test Program -- Bryan Sonneveldt, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 9:40am: Computed Tomography Scanning of a 1-meter Demonstration Heatshield for Extreme Entry Environments -- Cole Kazemba, NASA Ames Research Center
- 9:54am: Flight Testing a Vision-based Navigation & Hazard Detection and Avoidance (VN&HDA) Experiment over a Mars-representative Terrain -- Tiago Hormigo, Spin.Works S.A.
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10:08am:Coffee Break - Sponsored by AMA Inc.
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10:52am: Workshop Session 2 Cont'd: Demonstration & Flight Testing
- 10:52am: ADEPT SR-1 Development & Testing -- Brandon Smith, NASA Ames Research Center
- 11:06am: Planned Orbital Flight Test of a 6-meter HIAD -- Robert Dillman, Langley Research Center
- 11:20am: The HIAD Orbital Flight Demonstration Instrumentation Suite -- Greg Swanson, AMA Inc. at NASA Ames Research Center
- 11:34am: Mars 2020 entry, descent, and landing verification and validation overview -- GregorioVillar, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 11:48am:Mars 2020 entry, descent, and landing flight system verification and validation -- CjGiovingo, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 12:02pm:DLR explorer‐initiatives: Enabling technologies for future robotic space exploration -- Oliver Funke, DLR German Aerospace Center, Space Administration
- 12:16pm: Demonstration & Flight Testing Session Q&A
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12:30pm: Lunch Break & Student Professional Development Luncheon(left-hand section of Will Vill Dining Hall)
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1:30pm: Workshop Session 3: Aerosciences and Entry Technology -- Conveners:Karl Edquist (NASA LaRC), Andrew Brune (NASA LaRC), Mike Barnhardt (NASA Ames)
- 1:30pm:Future development plan of sample return capsule evolved on the basis of HAYABUSA SRC heritage --Kazuhiko Yamada, JAXA
- 1:44pm:A new era and a new trade space: Evaluating Earth entry vehicle concepts for a potential 2026 Mars sample return -- Scott Perino, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 1:58pm:Hot‐structure Earth entry vehicle concept for robotic Mars sample return -- Marcus Lobbia, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 2:12pm:Post flight analysis of the COMARS+ data and backcover heating of the ExoMars Schiaparelli lander -- Ali Gülhan, German Aerospace Center (DLR)
- 2:26pm:Pterodactyl: Integrated control design for precision targeting of deployable entry vehicles -- Sarah D'Souza, NASA Ames Research Center
- 2:40pm: (Student Presentation): Aerobraking at Mars: A machine-learning implementation -- Giusy Falcone, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
- 2:54pm:Overview of heatshield for extreme entry environment technology (HEEET) project -- Donald Ellerby, NASA Ames Research Center
- 3:08pm:Highly reliable 3‐dimensional woven thermal protection system for Mars sample return --Keith Peterson, NASA Ames Research Center
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3:22pm: Poster Short Talks III(view the list of Poster Presenters here)
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3:45pm:Coffee Break
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4:15pm: Workshop Session 3 Cont'd: Aerosciences and Entry Technology
- 4:15pm:Sizing and margin methodology for dual‐layer thermal protection systems -- Milad Mahzari, NASA Ames Research Center
- 4:29pm:Studies in support of Venus aerocapture utilizing drag modulation -- Robin Beck, NASA Ames Research Center
- 4:43pm:A common probe design for multiple planetary destinations -- Helen Hwang, NASA Ames Research Center
- 4:57pm:Science goals and payloads for common probe missions to Venus and the giant planets -- David Atkinson, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 5:11pm:Evaluation of common probe trajectories at multiple solar system destinations -- Alicia Dwyer Cianciolo, NASA Langley Research Center
- 5:25pm: Aerothermodynamics for Dragonfly's Titan entry -- Aaron Brandis, AMA Inc. at NASA Ames Research Center
- 5:39pm: Aeroscience and Entry Technology Session Q&A
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5:53pm: Poster Short Talks IV(view the list of Poster Presenters here)
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6:30pm: Poster Reception at IPPW-2018 Williams Village Venue(heavy hors d'oeuvres and beverages provided) - Sponsored by Advanced Space
Wednesday, 13 June 2018
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8:00am: Continental Breakfast
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8:30am: Workshop Session 4: Descent and Landing Technology
Conveners:Svenja Woicke (GernDLR), Steve Lingard (Vorticity Systems), Al Witkowski (Katabasis Engineering), Som Dutta (NASA LaRC)- 8:30am:Development and testing of precision landing GN&C technologies within NASA -- John Carson, NASA Johnson Space Center
- 8:44am: End-to-end GN&C for the powered descent and landing of reusable lunar landers -- Tiago Hormigo, Spin.Works S.A.
- 8:58am:Making an onboard reference map from MRO/CTX imagery for Mars 2020 lander vision system -- Yang Cheng, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 9:12am:Aerosciences considerations in the design of a powered descent phase for human-scale Mars lander vehicles -- Ashley Korzun, NASA Langley Research Center
- 9:26am:Planning for a supersonic retropropulsion test in the NASA Langley unitary plan wind tunnel -- Karl Edquist, NASA Langley Research Center
- 9:40am:Detailed investigations of the Huygens spin anomaly in a subsonic wind tunnel -- Jean-Pierre Lebreton, LPC2E
- 9:54am:A brief history of InSight parachute development and acceptance for flight -- Devin Kipp, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 10:08am:Reconstructed disk-gap-band parachute performance during the first two ASPIRE supersonic flight tests-- Clara O'Farrell, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 10:22am:Descent andLanding Technology Session Q&A
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10:30am: Coffee Break
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11:00am: Workshop Session 5: Instrumentation and Experiments
Conveners: Todd White (NASA ARC), Manuel Dominguez (Univ. Politecnica de Catalunya), Javier Gomez-Elvira (INTA/CAB)- 11:00am:The Mars microphone onboard supercam for the Mars 2020 rover -- David Mimoun, ISAE-SUPAERO, University of Toulouse
- 11:14am:InMARS: a comprehensive program for the development of key-technologies for miniature martian probes -- Ignacio Arruego, INTA
- 11:28am:Testing campaign of a martian spherical wind sensor at the AWTSII wind tunnel facility -- Manuel Dominguez-Pumar, Technical University of Catalonia
- 11:42am: (Student Presentation)Mars sample return to subglacial polar science on Earth -- Ryan Timoney, University of Glasgow
- 11:56am:Silicon carbide, vacuum tube nanoelectronics: Application for exploration missions requiring category III/IV planetary protection -- James Arnold, NASA Ames Research Center
- 12:10pm:Silicon carbide pressure sensors for Venus environment -- Robert Okojie, NASA Glenn Research Center
- 12:24pm:Development of a pneumatic sample transport system for ocean worlds -- Joseph Sparta, Honeybee Robotics
- 12:38pm:Ion selective electrodes for soluble salt measurements on icy worlds -- Aaron Noell, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 12:52pm:Development of a double hemispherical probe (DHP) for improved space plasma measurements -- Xu Wang,
- 1:06pm: Instrumentationand Experiments Session Q&A
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1:15pm: Lunch & Break for Afternoon Activities
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1:30pm-5:00pm: Afternoon Exploration & Enrichment Activities: Tours of ,, , and
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Free Time between Afternoon Activities and IPPW-2018 Banquet
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5:00pm (Optional): "Topping Out" Ceremony for New Aerospace Engineering Sciences Building, with reception. Details forthcoming for IPPW-2018 registrants.
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7:00pm: IPPW-2018 Banquet (Folsom Field Rooftop Terrace)
Thursday, 14 June 2018
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8:00am: Continental Breakfast
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8:30am: Workshop Session 6: Modeling, Simulation, and Validation
Conveners: Doug Adams (JHU-APL), Eric Stern (NASA ARC), Aaron Stehura (JPL), Julia Kowalski (RWTH-Aachen)- 8:30am:EDL modeling challenges for past and present planetary missions -- Michael Wright, NASA Ames Research Center
- 8:44am:ExoMars 2016: A preliminary post-flight study of the entry module heat shield interactions with the martian atmosphere -- Gregory Pinaud, Industry
- 8:58am:DSENDS simulation of Mars 2020 entry, descent, and landing -- Paul Burkhart, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 9:12am: (Student Presentation):Blackout analysis of martian reentry missions -- Sahadeo Ramjatan, University of Minnesota
- 9:26am:Design and characteristics of the suborbital expansion tube HEK-X for afterbody heating of sample return capsule -- Kohei Shimamura, University of Tsukuba
- 9:40am:Overview of global reference atmospheric model (GRAM) upgrades -- Hilary Justh, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
- 9:54am:Mars 2020 atmospheric modeling for flight mechanics simulation -- Soumyo Dutta, NASA Langley Research Center
- 10:08am:Progress on free-flight CFD simulation for blunt bodies in the supersonic regime -- Joseph Brock, NASA Ames Research Center
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10:22am:Coffee Break
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10:52am: Workshop Session Cont'd: Modeling, Simulation, and Validation
- 10:52am: (Student Presentation)Dynamic propagation of discrete-event drag modulation for Venus aerocapture -- Michael Werner,
- 11:06am: (Student Presentation)Coupled aero-structural modelling and optimisation of deployable Mars aero-decelerators -- Lisa Peacocke, Imperial College London
- 11:20am:The Case for High-fidelity Material Response Modeling -- Michael Barnhardt, NASA Ames Research Center
- 11:34am:Ablation and Heating During Atmospheric Entry and Its Effect on Airburst Risk -- Eric Stern, NASA Ames Research Center
- 11:48am: (Student Presentation)CFD analysis of the cork-phenolic heat shield of a reentry Qubesat in arc-jet conditions including ablation and pyrolysis -- Ata Onur Baskaya, Middle East Technical University
- 12:02pm:How gravity and temperature affect the performance of thermal melting probes -- Julia Kowalski, RWTH Aachen University
- 12:16pm: Modeling, Simulation, and Validation Session Q&A
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12:30pm: Lunch
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1:30pm: Workshop Session 7: Lunar and Small Body Exploration
Convener: Erisa Stilley (JPL), Ravi Prakash (JPL), Andy Frick (Blue Origin), Benoit Pigneur (University College London)- 1:30pm:The comet astrobiology exploration sample return (CAESAR) new frontiers mission -- Michael Amato, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
- 1:44pm:Key challenges in capturing a boulder for the asteroid redirect robotic mission -- Benjamin Cichy, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
- 1:58pm:Probing Psyche: Mission overview and operations concept -- Carol Polanskey, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 2:12pm:A modular ascender concept for sample return missions -- Robert Buchwald, Airbus Defence and Space
- 2:26pm:PROSPECT - thermal design challenges for lunar volatile extraction -- Philipp Hager, European Space Agency,ESTEC
- 2:40pm: (Student Presentation)SIRONA1 - a selenocentric platform hostinginternational payloads -- Gilles Bailet, CentraleSupélec, Université Paris Saclay
- 2:54pm:Initial results of shell lander impact tests for the exploration of medium-sized airless bodies -- Christian Grimm, German Aerospace Center (DLR)
- 3:08pm:Cubesat electrostatic dust analyzer (CEDA) for measuring electrostatic dust transport on airless bodies - Xu Wang,
- 3:22pm: Effects of probe shape and surface topography in deployment to small bodies -- Dan Scheeres,
- 3:36pm: Lunar and Small Body Exploration Session Q&A
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3:45pm:Coffee Break
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4:15pm: Workshop Session 8: SmallSat and CubeSat Probes
Conveners: Ozgur Karatekin (Royal Observatory of Belgium), Isil Sakraker (DLR)- 4:15pm:Drag modulation aerocapture for SmallSat science missions to Venus -- Adam Nelessen, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 4:29pm:Minimum-mass limits for streamlined Venus atmospheric probes -- Jacob Izraelevitz, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 4:43pm: Designs of mobile landers for small bodies -- Jens Biele, German Aerospace Center (DLR)
- 4:57pm:Miniaturised Asteroid Remote Geophysical Observer (M-ARGO): A stand-alone deep space CubeSat system for lowcost science and exploration missions -- Phillip Hager, European Space Agency, ESTEC
- 5:11pm:(Student Presentation) Multiprobe mission design with applications to the outer planets -- Archit Arora, Purdue University
- 5:25pm: (Student Presentation)Assessment of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) effects on CubeSat sized re-entry capsule -- Robin Müller, University of Stuttgart Institute of Space Systems
- 5:39pm:Venus airglow measurements and orbiter for seismicity (VAMOS): A mission concept study -- Atilla Komjathy, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 5:53pm: SmallSat & CubeSat Probes Session Q&A
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6:00pm: Invited Talk: 37 Years of AeroassistedSpacecraft at Martin Marietta and Lockheed Martin-- Bill Willcockson
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6:30pm:Adjourn for the Day
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7:30pm: International Organizing Committee (IOC) Dinner (by invitation only)
Friday, 15 June 2018
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8:00am: Continental Breakfast
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8:30am: Workshop Session 9: Outer Solar System Exploration
Conveners: David Atkinson (JPL), Aline Zimmer (JPL), Olivier Mousis (Aix-Marseille Université)- 8:30am:Europa lander mission overview and update -- Steven Sell, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 8:44am:Overview of the Europa lander descent stage flight system concept -- Tejas Kulkarni, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 8:58am:Landing on Europa: Key challenges and architecture concept -- Aline Zimmer, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 9:12am:Concepts on maximizing data return for a potential Europa lander using direct to Earth communications -- Grace Tan-Wang, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 9:26am:Surface and subsurface sampling drills for life detection on ocean worlds -- Fredrik Rehnmark, Honeybee Robotics
- 9:40am:Key technology needs for accessing the ocean of an icy moon -- Thomas Cwik, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 9:54am: (Student Presentation)Exploring icy worlds: Accessing the subsurface voids of Titan through autonomous collaborative hybrid robots --Pradyumna Vyshnav, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 10:08am: Sample acquisition and transfer for a Titan lander -- Ralph Lorenz, Applied Physical Laboratory
- 10:22am:Coffee Break
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10:52am: Workshop Session 9 Cont'd: Outer Solar System Exploration
- 10:52am: New technologies for powering a surface mission on Titan: Capturing energy from Titan's winds for science exploration (CETIWISE) -- William O'Hara, Sierra Nevada Corporation
- 11:06am:Dragonfly: Rotorcraft landing on Titan -- Doug Adams, Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
- 11:20am:(Student Presentation)Enceladus probe mission design using Titan aerogravity-assist -- Ye Lu, Purdue University
- 11:34am:Scientific rational for Uranus and Neptune in situ explorations -- Olivier Mousis,Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Marseille
- 11:48am:A concept for a joint NASA/ESA mission for in situ exploration of an ice giant planet -- David Atkinson, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- 12:02pm:(Student Presentation):Hybrid aerocapture using low L/D aeroshells for icy giant missions -- AthulPradeepkumar Girija, Purdue University
- 12:16pm:Outer Solar System Exploration Session Q&A
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12:30pm: Lunch
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1:30pm: Closing Session, Workshop Session Findings, andAwards
Convener: Bernie Bienstock (JPL)- 1:30pm: Session Opening Remarks -- Bernie Bienstock (JPL), Chair, IPPW International Organizing Committee
- 1:35pm: Session Findings -- Program Organizing Committee & Session Conveners (10 mins per session)
- 3:05pm: Student Award Presentations -- Svenja Woicke (German Aerospace Center, DLR) and Gregory Villar (JPL), Co-Chairs, Student Organizing Committee
- 3:15pm: Plan for IPPW-2019 -- Steve Lingard, Vorticity Systems
- 3:25pm: Farewell Remarks --Bernie Bienstock (JPL), Chair, IPPW International Organizing Committee
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3:30pm:IPPW-2018 Adjourned. See you in Oxford in July 2019!