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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Inferences about the igneous and impact evolution of planetary bodies are based upon spectral remote sensing of their surfaces. However, it is not the rocks of a body that are seen by the remote sensing, but rather the regolith, that may contain small pieces of rock but also many other phases as well. Indeed, recent flybys of objects even as small as asteroid Ida have shown that these objects are covered by a regolith. Thus, spectral properties cannot be directly converted into information about the igneous history of the object. It is imperative to fully understand the nature of the regolith, particularly its finer fraction termed "soil," to appreciate the possible effects of "space weathering" on the reflectance spectra. We have initiated a study of our nearest, regolith-bearing body, the Moon, as "ground truth" for further probes of planetary and asteroidal surfaces. the foundation for remote chemical and mineralogical analyses lies in the physics underlying optical absorption and the linking of spectral properties of materials measured in the laboratory to well understood mineral species and their mixtures. From this statement, it is obvious that there should be a thorough integration of the material science of lunar rocks and soils with the remote-sensing observations. That is, the lunar samples returned by the Apollo missions provide a direct means for evaluation of spectral characteristics of the Moon. However, this marriage of the remote-sensing and lunar sample communities has suffered from a prolonged unconsummated betrothal, nurtured by an obvious complacency by both parties. To make more direct and quantitative links between soil chemistry/mineralogy and spectral properties, we have initiated a program to (1) obtain accurate characterization of the petrography of lunar soils (in terms relevant to remote analyses), coupled with (2) measurement of precise reflectance spectra, with testing and use of appropriate analytical tools that identify and characterize individual mineral and glass components. It is the finest-sized fractions of the bulk lunar soil that dominate the observed spectral signatures.
    Keywords: Lunar and Planetary Exploration
    Type: Workshop on New Views of the Moon: Integrated Remotely Sensed, Geophysical, and Sample Datasets; 71-72; LPI-Contrib-958
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: One of the chief scientific objectives of the Clementine mission at the Moon was to acquire global multispectral mapping. A global digital map of the Moon in 11 spectral bandpasses and at a scale of 100 m/pixel is being produced at the U.S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff Arizona Near-global coverage was acquired with the UVVIS camera (central wavelengths of 415, 750, 900, 950, and 1000 nm) and the NIR camera (1102, 1248, 1499, 1996, 2620, and 2792 nary). We expect to complete processing of the UVVIS mosaics before the fall of 1998, and to complete the NIR mosaics a year later. The purpose of this poster is to provide an update on the processing and to show examples of the products or perhaps even a wall-sized display of color products from the UVVIS mosaics.
    Keywords: Lunar and Planetary Exploration
    Type: Workshop on New Views of the Moon: Integrated Remotely Sensed, Geophysical, and Sample Datasets; 26-27; LPI-Contrib-958
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Much of the surface of Mars is covered by material that is bright and reddish at visible wavelengths and which is interpreted as chemically altered soil. High spatial resolution data from the ISM near-infrared imaging spectrometer on the Phobos 2 spacecraft have provided new information about the composition and compositional heterogeneity of this soil. Most bright soil exhibits a weak, narrow absorption feature near 2.2 micron, suggesting the presence of poorly crystalline phyllosilicate. The strength of the 3.0-micron H2O absorption exhibits spatially coherent variations, with stronger absorptions occurring in specific geologic units. These variations may result from differences in the content of molecular water in soils developed on different deposits. Additionally, the position and shape of the 0.9-micron Fe(3+) absorption indicate hematite to be present in bright soils covering many areas, including Tharsis. However, other large areas covered by bright soil, including much of Arabia, exhibit a deeper absorption at a longer wavelength, suggesting occurrence of ferric minerals other than hematite. These spectral heterogeneities indicate that bright martian soil is compositionally diverse and not completely homogenized by eolian activity. The compositional differences may result from different histories of chemical alteration of parent materials and their resulting soils, possibly including local effects of liquid water.
    Keywords: Lunar and Planetary Exploration
    Type: NASA-CR-204461 , NAS 1.26:204461 , LPI-Contrib-815 , Icarus (ISSN 0019-1035); 105; 454-468
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-08-15
    Description: Infrared reflectance spectra of carefully selected Mars soil analog materials have been measured under low atmospheric pressures and temperatures. Chemically altered montmorillonites containing ferrihydrite and hydrated ferric sulfate complexes are examined, as well as synthetic ferrihydrite and a palagonitic soil from Haleakala, Maui. Reflectance spectra of these analog materials exhibit subtle visible to near-infrared features, which are indicative of nanophase ferric oxides or oxyhydroxides and are similar to features observed in the spectra of the bright regions of Mars. Infrared reflectance spectra of these analogs include hydration features due to structural OH, bound H2O, and adsorbed H2O. The spectral character of these hydration features is highly dependent on the sample environment and on the nature of the H2O/OH in the analogs. The behavior of the hydration features near 1.9 micron, 2.2 micron, 2.7 micron, 3 micron, and 6 microns are reported here in spectra measured under a Marslike atmospheric environment. In spectra of these analogs measured under dry Earth atmospheric conditions the 1.9-micron band depth is 8-17%; this band is much stronger under moist conditions. Under Marslike atmospheric conditions the 1.9-micron feature is broad and barely discernible (1-3% band depth) in spectra of the ferrihydrite and palagonitic soil samples. In comparable spectra of the ferric sulfate-bearing montmorillonite the 1.9-micron feature is also broad, but stronger (6% band depth). In the low atmospheric pressure and temperature spectra of the ferrihydrite-bearing montmorillonite this feature is sharper than the other analogs and relatively stronger (6% band depth). Although the intensity of the 3-micron band is weaker in spectra of each of the analogs when measured under Marslike conditions, the 3-micron band remains a dominant feature and is especially broad in spectra of the ferrihydrite and palagonitic soil. The structural OH features observed in these materials at 2.2-2.3 micron and 2.75 microns remain largely unaffected by the environmental conditions. A shift in the Christiansen feature towards shorter wavelengths has also been observed with decreasing atmospheric pressure and temperature in the midinfrared spectra of these samples.
    Keywords: Lunar and Planetary Exploration
    Type: Paper-94JE03331 , MSATT; 100; E3; 5369-5379
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