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Dr. Robert Pappalardo, Project Scientist for the Europa Clipper Mission, gives this month’s featured talk. In his words: “On October 14, 2024, NASA’s Europa Clipper spacecraft launched on its journey to Jupiter’s moon Europa, an icy world believed to harbor a global subsurface ocean. Observations from the Galileo mission revealed Europa to have a relatively young and deformed ice surface. An induced magnetic field implies the presence of a salty ocean beneath the ice. Tidal forces from Jupiter fracture the ice shell into ridges, bands, and chaotic terrains, suggesting ice mobility and possible local melting. Earth- and space-based telescopes suggest the presence of plumes that may vent interior water vapor into space. Europa may contain the key ingredients necessary for life—liquid water, bioessential elements, chemical energy, and long-term stability—making it a compelling target for investigation of ocean world habitability. The Europa Clipper mission will address Europa’s habitability using an advanced suite of remote-sensing and in-situ instruments that probe the moon’s interior, composition, and geology, while also searching for present-day activity such as plumes. During its 5.5-year cruise to Jupiter, the mission is maturing operations concepts and validating instrument performance, including through flyby observations of Mars, Earth, and interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS. After entering Jupiter orbit in 2030, the spacecraft will execute 49 close encounters with Europa at altitudes of typically 25–100 km above the surface, enabling unprecedented observations of this ocean world.” Dr. Pappalardo’s presentation will summarize our current understanding of Europa, describe how Europa Clipper is designed to investigate its habitability, and provide an update on mission status as the spacecraft continues its journey to the Jovian system. Presenter: Robert Pappalardo Robert Pappalardo is a JPL Fellow and Senior Research Scientist, and the Project Scientist for NASA’s Europa Clipper Mission at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology. He has also served as the Project Scientist for the first extended mission of the Cassini spacecraft at Saturn, for which he received NASA’s Exceptional Service Medal. He received his B.A. in Geological Sciences from Cornell University in 1986, and he obtained his Ph.D. in Geology from Arizona State University in 1994. His research focuses on processes that have shaped the icy satellites of the outer solar system, especially Europa and the role of its probable subsurface ocean. He has co-authored over 150 peer-reviewed journal papers and book chapters, and he served as the chief editor of the University of Arizona Press book Europa. Through the years, Pappalardo has mentored students and post-docs, and he has worked with various science museums and organizations to bring the excitement of astronomy and planetary exploration to the public.