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The Moon in a Box: Thermal Infrared Spectroscopy of Silicate Mineral Mixtures in a Simulated Lunar Environment
  • Chanud Yasanayake,
  • Ardith Bravenec,
  • Benjamin Greenhagen
Chanud Yasanayake
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Ardith Bravenec
University of Edinburgh; Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab
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Benjamin Greenhagen
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab
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Abstract

A planetary surface’s thermal infrared (TIR) emissions provide insight into the surface’s composition. Different minerals can be identified by their characteristic TIR spectral signatures. Therefore one can retrieve surface mineral composition by comparing TIR observations of a planetary surface against a library of known mineral TIR spectra measured on Earth. However for airless bodies such as the Moon, creating such a spectral library poses a challenge: minerals exhibit different TIR characteristics when measured in typical terrestrial conditions versus in lunar surface-like environments. We work to overcome this challenge by measuring TIR emission spectra of mineral samples in a chamber that simulates the lunar environment. The Simulated Airless Body Emission Laboratory (SABEL) chamber heats particulate samples under vacuum to generate a thermal gradient akin to that found in the upper regolith (i.e. epiregolith) of airless bodies. The presence of this thermal gradient—modeled to be as steep as ~60K/100 μm for the Moon—is due to airless bodies lacking the convective heat transfer provided by an atmosphere. This thermal gradient is responsible for the altered TIR spectral emission characteristics of the lunar surface, so simulating it in SABEL allows us to measure TIR spectra that are directly comparable to remotely sensed TIR observations from the Diviner Lunar Radiometer (Diviner) instrument aboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO). The work presented here focuses on one particular application of SABEL: characterizing the TIR emission spectra of silicate mineral mixtures with the endmembers plagioclase, pyroxene, and olivine. These endmembers bound the typical mineral compositions of the lunar surface. By understanding the TIR characteristics of these endmembers’ mixtures, and in particular how the wavelength position of the Christiansen feature—an emissivity maximum sensed by Diviner—changes for different mixtures, we can better interpret TIR data and their implications for surface composition.