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Moon Diver: A Discovery Mission Concept for Understanding the History of Secondary Crusts through the Exploration of a Lunar Mare Pit

机译:月亮潜水员:通过探索月球母马坑来了解次要地壳史的发现任务概念

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When the Apollo astronauts collected samples from Tranquility Base in 1969, they provided an unprecedented window into the processes that shaped the Moon. Ever since, the Moon has served as a “keystone” for understanding planetary geological processes throughout the Solar System. Like all samples that have been returned from the Moon, the Apollo 11 samples were collected from the lunar regolith, a layer of jumbled and pulverized rocks that blankets and obscures the Moon's bedrock geology. When geologists reconstruct the history of the Moon, these samples are like scattered puzzle pieces, each representing important information, but removed from the context of their formation and isolated from the bigger picture of how the Moon's crust was formed. The goal of Moon Diver is to return to Mare Tranquillitatis, taking advantage of the discovery of a natural pit cave entrance exposing a deep cross-section through both the lunar regolith as well as tens of meters of bedrock lava layers. Collecting information on the chemistry, mineralogy, and morphology of these intact bedrock layers would allow us to investigate where rocky crusts come from, how they are emplaced, and the process by which they are transformed into the regolith layer that we see from space. In doing so, the mission would combine the deep knowledge gained by Apollo with the unprecedented in situ access to secondary crust granted by the lunar mare pit to understand these fundamental processes on the Moon, and to use this knowledge as a keystone for understanding the same processes across the Solar System. The success of the Moon Diver concept hinges on accessing the subsurface. The existence of the mare pit provides a cross-section through the lunar maria. Access to the record exposed in the wall of this pit is provided by two critical space technologies: pinpoint landing (allowing the delivery of the payload close to the pit) and extreme terrain mobility (allowing the delivery of capable instruments to the cliff wall). Pinpoint landing is a closed-loop guidance and navigation capability that repeatedly matches visual features from a downward-facing camera to a priori acquired terrain maps. This body-relative navigation is then used with closed-loop control to guide the spacecraft toward its landing target, yielding a tight landing ellipse. Once on the surface, an extreme-terrain robotic explorer, called Axel, would egress from the lander and traverse tens of meters to the pit. The lander provides mechanical support, power and communication to the rover through its umbilical tether. Anchored to the lander, the two-wheeled, tail-dragger rover would pay out its tether as it traverses toward the pit. With the aid of its 300-meter tether, the rover can traverse the steep slopes of the pit funnel and rappel its vertical walls. The rover carries a surface preparation tool together with a suite of three instrument types: (a) a trio of high-resolution cameras (Mars 2020's EECAMs) for acquiring context images of the near and far walls with the near-wall pair in a stereoscopic configuration, (b) an alpha-particle-X-ray Spectrometer (MSL's APXS) for elemental composition, and (c) a multi-spectral microscopic imager (MMI) that uses controlled lighting for minerology. The surface-preparation tool removes dust and patina that may be present on the rock wall by grinding a small area. The surface-preparation tool, the MMI and the APXS would be deployed from their instrument bays in one of the wheel wells. The rover would independently point each of its instruments at the same target of interest on the wall with millimeter-level repeatability. Confidence in the technologies of pinpoint landing and extreme-terrain access is based on helicopter testing of terrain-relative navigation and field testing of extreme terrain mobility respectively. The latter was tested using Axel rover prototypes with integrated science instruments at multiple terrestrial analog sites including a basaltic pit
机译:当Apollo Astronauts于1969年从宁静基地收集样本时,它们为成形月球的过程提供了一个前所未有的窗口。从那以后,月亮曾作为理解整个太阳系整个地质过程的“梯形石”。就像从月球返回的所有样品一样,从月球重新旋转中收集Apollo 11样品,一层混乱和粉碎的岩石,毯子遮盖并遮挡了月亮的基岩地质。当地质学家重建月亮历史时,这些样本就像散射的拼图,每个拼图碎片,每个样品都代表着重要信息,而是从他们的形成背景中取出并从较大的图像中被形成为如何形成月亮的地壳。月亮潜水员的目标是返回玛勒·斯坦基塔斯,利用了天然坑洞洞穴进入的发现,通过月球重新旋转以及数十米的基岩熔岩层来发现深度横截面。收集有关这些完整基岩层的化学,矿物学和形态的信息将使我们调查岩石地壳来自哪里,它们如何被施加,以及它们被转变为从空间所看到的石油正质层的过程。在这样做时,使命将结合阿波罗获得的深度知识与月球母马坑授予的次要外壳的前所未有的进入,以了解月球上的这些基本进程,并将这些知识用作理解相同的梯队在太阳系上的过程。月亮潜水员概念铰链的成功访问地下。母马坑的存在提供了通过月球玛丽亚的横截面。通过两个关键空间技术提供进入壁墙的记录:Pinpoint降落(允许靠近坑的有效载荷)和极端地形移动(允许能力的仪器向悬崖墙传送)。 Pinpoint Landing是一种闭环引导和导航能力,其重复将视觉特征与向下的相机中的视觉功能与先验的地形映射相匹配。然后将该体相对导航与闭环控制一起使用,以引导航天器朝向其着陆目标,产生紧密的着陆椭圆。一旦在地面上,一个叫做Axel的极端地形机器人探险家将从着陆器出口并将数十米到坑出口。兰德通过脐带提供机械支撑,动力和通信。锚定到着陆器,双轮,尾巴拖曳者会在朝坑中支付其系绳。借助于其300米的系绳,流动站可以遍历坑漏斗的陡坡和垂直墙壁。流动站将表面制备工具与一套三种仪器类型一起进行:(a)用于获取近壁对在立体上的近壁对的上下壁的上下文图像的三重奏的三倍的高分辨率摄像机(MARS 2020的EECAM)。配置,(b)元素组成的α-粒子 - X射线光谱仪(MSL的APX),和(c)用于使用受控照明的多光谱微观成像仪(MMI)。表面制备工具通过磨削小区域去除可能存在于岩壁上的灰尘和铜绿。表面制备工具,MMI和APX将在其中一个轮井中的仪器架上部署。流动站将独立地将其仪器的相同目标独立地指向墙壁的相同目标,具有毫米级可重复性。对精确降落和极端地形进入技术的信心基于对地形相对导航的直升机测试,分别对极端地形移动的现场测试。后者使用Axel Rover型原型进行了测试,在包括玄武岩坑的多个陆地模拟站点的集成科学仪器

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