NASA begins building nuclear-powered Dragonfly drone for 2028 launch to Saturn’s moon Titan


NASA is one step closer to sending a drone mission to another world.

Technicians at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Maryland have begun building and testing the nuclear-powered Dragonfly rotorcraftwhich will launch towards the enormous Saturn moon Titanium in 2028.

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four people in white protective clothing work with a complex electrical equipment inside a white-walled scientific laboratory

From left, Carlisa Drew, Seth Harvey, Anthony Fanelli, Emory Toomey and TJ Lee perform power and function testing on Dragonfly’s Integrated Electronics Module (IEM) and Power Switching Unit (PSU) in the cleanroom at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland. The IEM is Dragonfly’s “brain”, containing the spacecraft’s core avionics; The PSUs control the power flow to Dragonfly’s instruments and systems. (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ed Whitman)

“Building a first-of-its-kind vehicle to fly over another ocean world this spring the solar system pushing us to the edge of what’s possible, but that’s exactly why this phase is so exciting,” Turtle added. “The team is doing an outstanding job, and every component we install and every test we run brings us one step closer to launching Dragonfly to Titan.”

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