This is Europa clipper version of golden record

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The Europa Clipper’s “Golden Record” is a layered message that aims to spark imagination and offer a unifying vision. It’s similar to the Voyager spacecraft’s Golden Record, which carries sounds and images to convey the richness and diversity of life on Earth

The message on the Europa Clipper’s “Golden Record” includes:

  • A message to the Cosmos 
  • A “Message in a Bottle” initiative to include names 
  • A poem titled “In Praise of Mystery: A Poem for Europa” written by U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limón 
  • A chip attached to a metal plate engraved with the poem The Europa Clipper is a NASA mission that will launch in 2024 on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket. It will travel 1.6 billion miles (2.6 billion kilometers) to Jupiter’s moon Europa in 2030 to see if Europa can support life. 

The Europa Clipper mission will launch in October and it will carry a plaque with images, illustrations and messages. There will be more than 2.6 million names and the word for ‘water’ converted into waveform from 103 languages. I think Captain James T Kirk would be proud of NASA for boldly going

The Golden Record also includes:

  • A portrait of Ron Greeley, a planetary science founder who helped develop the Europa mission 
  • Audio waveforms of the word “water” in 103 languages 
  • A silicon microchip with over 2.6 million names submitted by the public 
  • Art that highlights the connection between Earth and Europa 
  • Artwork that symbolizes humanity

The records had both audio and visuals that aimed to capture Earth’s diversity of life and culture, including greetings in 59 human languages and 115 images of life

NASA’s Europa Clipper is a space probe that will study Jupiter’s moon Europa. The spacecraft is scheduled to launch in October 2024 and arrive at Jupiter in 2030. 

The spacecraft’s main science goal is to determine if Europa has places below its surface that could support life. The spacecraft will perform close flybys of Europa, gathering detailed measurements to investigate whether the moon could have conditions suitable for life. 

The spacecraft’s science objectives include:

  • Understanding the nature of the ice shell and the ocean beneath it 
  • Learning how much the ocean interacts with the surface 
  • Analyzing the composition of the ocean to figure out if it really does have the ingredients to form and sustain life 
  • Mapping Europa’s geology, looking for signs of The spacecraft’s payload includes:
    • Cameras and spectrometers to produce high-resolution images and composition maps of Europa’s surface and thin atmosphere 
    • An ice-penetrating radar to search for subsurface water 
    • Studying the moon’s surface elevations, composition, and roughness 
    • Searching the moon’s atmosphere for plumes 

NASA’s Europa Clipper will conduct detailed reconnaissance of Jupiter’s moon Europa and investigate whether the icy moon could have conditions suitable for life

The Voyager spacecraft carried on board a plethora of scientific instruments but attached to the side was a golden record. The sounds of Earth were recorded upon it. Now, another mission is going to be carrying a message out into space. The Europa Clipper mission will launch in October and it will carry a plaque with images, illustrations and messages. There will be more than 2.6 million names and the word for ‘water’ converted into waveform from 103 languages

In a statement, Lori Glaze, director of Planetary Science Division at NASA said “The plate combines the best humanity has to offer across the Universe – science, technology, education, art and math.” He went on to say “The message of connection through water, essential for all forms of life as we know it, perfectly illustrates Earth’s tie to this mysterious ocean world we are setting out to explore.”

The Europa Clipper mission is intended to determine if Europa harbors conditions suitable for life. Scientists estimate that a global ocean with more than twice the amount of water in Earth’s oceans exists beneath Europa’s thick icy shell

The US space agency has a long history of sending names and meaningful designs aloft aboard missions, including the Voyager probes, the Perseverance rover and Parker Solar Probe. Now, it’s Europa Clipper’s turn to carry on the tradition of ferrying a design that illustrates why humans are driven to explore the cosmos.

We’ve packed a lot of thought and inspiration into this plate design, as we have into this mission itself,” said Robert Pappalardo, project scientist at JPL, in a statement. “It’s been a decades-long journey, and we can’t wait to see what Europa Clipper shows us at this water world.”

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