Abstract
Starting in 2010 with the VALKYRIE cryobot project (NASA ASTEP), Stone
Aerospace has been investigating methods to penetrate thick layers of
ice. The focus of these methods is to develop cryobot vehicles capable
of transporting payloads representative of an Ocean Worlds sub-ice
mission (including on-board sensing and deployable swimming rovers).
Critical to these types of carrier vehicles—and in fact any efficient
ice-penetrating probe—is a detailed understanding of the thermal and
physical dynamics of ice penetrators under the wide variety of
conditions that may be encountered in the five operating regimes of such
a mission: starting (under cryogenic temperatures and vacuum), brittle
ice transit, ductile ice transit, dirty ice, and breakthrough. Early
work on terrestrial ice-penetrating probes generated initial closed-form
models which remain powerful for first-cut analyses. Further work on
refining these models for more exotic environments (cryogenic or/and
impure ices as will be encountered on Europa and other Ocean Worlds) has
resulted in varying levels of success. Above all, the field suffers from
very sparse, limited experimental validation. We review the current
understanding of the thermodynamics of ice-penetrating vehicles in a
variety of ice environments, both terrestrial and those of other Ocean
Worlds, and present new models for ice regimes expected in both
terrestrial and extraterrestrial applications. In addition, to begin to
address the limited empirical understanding of these penetration
dynamics—particularly in very cold environments—we present initial
results and planned further work on validation tests in the Stone
Aerospace Europa Tower cryogenic vacuum chamber. Validated thermodynamic
models for cryobots operating in multiple regimes will allow for the
assessment of feasibility of designs, prediction of full mission times,
and enable optimal design of critical top-level parameters such as
required power, vehicle shape, and internal heat distribution
mechanisms.