Innovation and Foresight Working Groups
(ABER, FMI, Thales Alenia France)
Task 4 will bring together the EPN2020-RI Industry Officer along with science and industrial teams to promote the innovation that is inherent in space activities because of the challenging environments they work in. The very existence of a structured community of European planetary scientists is of considerable added value for the European industry, not only for the large companies of the space sector but even more importantly for SMEs and non-space industry, which must identify relevant interlocutors. Identifying a market is vital in order to invest in technology. For an SME or for a larger non-space company, assessing opportunities for planetary science applications remains a challenge. The technical foresight will help to identify specific topics relevant to SMEs.
Task 4 will deliver two thematic workshops per year with participants from industry and academia. Outcomes from WSs will be rapidly disseminated to build industry involvement in later years. Task 4 will result in:
Technology foresight
- bring together science and industrial teams to promote the innovation that is inherent in space activities because of the challenging environments they work in.
- Added value for the European industry, not only for the large companies of the space sector but even more importantly for SMEs and non-space industry
- Identifying a market is vital in order to invest in technology. For an SME or for a larger non-space company, assessing opportunities for planetary science applications remains a challenge.
- Two thematic workshops per year with participants from industry and academia. Outcomes from WSs will be rapidly disseminated to build industry involvement in later years.
- Topical Working Groups with participants from planetary science groups, SMEs and other industrial partners to promote innovation in planetary science (with SMEs);
- Workshops on innovative instrumentation for planetary missions. The specific new observational challenges suggested by the scientific groups will be assessed in the light of existing technological possibilities, and the need/cost of new instrumentation development
- Workshops on cooperation between EUROSPACE and the European planetary science academia. (EUROSPACE -www.eurospace.org is the trade association of the European Space Industry
Technology foresight workshops
- The European planetary community lacks a clear path for identifying the technology needed for future planetary exploration, where European instrument capabilities can be married to planetary exploration science requirements.
- We also lack a way of responding to our stakeholders in industry. Will to promote innovative measurement techniques in forthcoming planetary science/missions, with commercial and industrial companies including SMEs;
- We organise a series of workshops aimed at identifying roadmaps for key technologies
- Previous Examples:
- Planetary Robotics
- Planetary Cartography
- Detectors for Planetary Science
Roadmap questions
- What are the major science drivers for the next 20 years? (i.e. from now to 2030)
- How will science instrumentation change over the next 20 years?
- What method swill we need to address these science challenges (Resolution, radiation Hardness, readout speed etc.)?
- What are the priority technologies that we must invest in now to meet these future science challenges?
- What are the priority constituent technologies that we must invest in now to meet these future science challenges? (e.g. materials technology, computing, etc.)
- Are there nearer term technologies that we can significantly improve, and how?
- What will the planetary technology road-maplook like from now to 2030?