SMART-1 - SIR
http://www.mps.mpg.de/en/projekte/smart/sir/index.html

SIR

Spectrometer InfraRed onboard ESA's SMART-1 Mission to the moon

Figure 1. Assembled SIR 1 instrument with optic box, sensor head unit and radiator unit. The SIR 1 & SIR 2 instruments are infrared spectrometers build for remote sensing of the lunar surface. SIR 1’s scientific mission was already successfully completed in 2006 when it crashed with the SMART-1 satellite onto the surface of the Moon. During its mission millions of spectra were taken all over the lunar surface. SIR 2 will go to the Moon with the first Indian lunar mission, Chandrayaan-1, in 2008.


> Science Objectives
> The Instrument
> The Science behind the project
> Learning from lunar near-infrared spectra
> Related links
> SIR Home Page at MPS
> SIR publications by MPS members

Science objectives


The Instrument

Both SIR spectrometers operate in the near-infrared in the wavelength range from 0.9 to 2.4 micrometer. The reflected light from the Moon is focused onto a fibre, which leads the light to the spectrometer body. At the grating the light is dispersed and then detected by an IR sensor with 256 pixels. Each pixel is a photodiode converting the incoming light into an electronic signal.



Figure 2. Schematic of the SIR instruments.


In the infrared cooling of the detector is futile, for the thermal background has a huge impact at higher temperatures. To avoid this SIR 1 and SIR 2 work at temperatures around -50 degrees. Since the SIR instruments are footprint spectrometers, each spectra represents the surface characteristics of an ellipse whose size is defined by the opening angle of the instrument and the distance between the spacecraft and the ground. SIR 1 had a footprint size between 300 metesr and 2.5 kilometers, depending on the orbit.

For SIR 2 the design was revised. Changes have been made in all parts, and the units will be installed on Chandrayaan-1, apart from each other, to ensure optimal cooling conditions.



The Science behind the project

Every planetary surface consists of different minerals and of the rocks they form. On the Earth the rocky surface is nearly everywhere covered by soil, a mixture of eroded rocks and organic remains. With no biosphere on the Moon the lunar soil is pulverized rock, but the processes of erosion are quiet different from those on Earth. Since we cannot go and take samples from all surfaces in our solar system to investigate their composition, we use the characteristic features which those minerals imprint on the reflected light from the Sun to identify them from space. Some portions of the solar spectrum are more strongly absorbed and scattered, and thus less reflected than others by minerals. In those wavelength regions we see a dip in the reflected light that we call an absorption band. One can compare it to the unique fingerprint every human being has. The near-infrared is extremely well suited for identifying minerals from space because the most abundant and common minerals in the solar system show characteristic absorption features in this wavelength range which clearly distinguishes them from each other.



Figure 3. Principle of Remote Sensing.



In the figure below an example for a near-infrared spectrum is given. A Lherzolite rock piece was pulverized and examined with an infrared spectrometer. Olivin and Pyroxen are the major minerals in this rock type, and together with Plagioclase these three minerals are the major minerals on the lunar surface and in the solar system. In a mixture of minerals the different features are superimposed on each other, but not necessarily in a linear way. Depending on the chemical composition pyroxens show absorption bands around 1 micrometer or around 1 and 2 micrometer(s) in the near-infrared while Olivin has a broad-band around 1 micrometer. Since our Lherzolite rock contains of Olivin and Pyroxen its spectra exhibits a Pyroxen band at 1.8 micrometers and a band at 1 micrometer, from which we can only see the drop to a shorter wavelength. This 1-micrometer band is a mixture of the 1-micrometer band of Olivin and that of Pyroxen. With the SIR instruments spectra of this kind are taken all along the orbit between 0.9 and 2.4 micrometers.



Figure 4. Reflectance spectra of a Lherzolite stone powder.




Learning from lunar near-infrared spectra

Three major pieces of information from which we can draw conclusions about the surface composition and the surface age are confined in the spectra of reflected sunlight in the near-infrared.

  1. Overall reflectance or the question: "Do we have a bright or a dark surface?" This gives a first hint on the mineral composition and the age. The lunar, surface as seen from the Moon, shows brighter and darker areas. The bright areas are either young or contain great amounts of the mineral Plagioclase, which is the most common mineral on the lunar surface. Dark regions contain greater amounts of Pyroxen and contributions from Ilmenite as well, which has the talent to stongly reduce the overall reflectance without producing absorption bands in the near-infrared.
  2. Position, depth and broadness of absorption bands or the question: "What kind of minerals or mineral mixtures make up the surface area we observe?" From the appearance of absorption bands we can directly draw conclusions on the surface composition by comparison with laboratory spectra.
  3. Continuum slope or the question: "How old is the surface?" On the Moon and other bodies without atmosphere a special process called "space weathering" leads to a darkening of the surface with time. This process reduces the reflectance slightly stronger at shorter wavelengths and increases the continuum slope, namely the slope of the spectral reflectance under negligence of absorption bands.

With the technique of remote sensing one is able to obtain information from the upper micrometers of the surface only. To learn about the three-dimensional structure of the Moon we can take advantage of the huge impacts in which the Moon was exposed to in the last 4 billion years, which brought material from a larger depth into our reach. The peaks of large impacts are known to expose material from several kilometers depth, and the lavas in the mare represent molten material from the source regions up to 300 km depth. Using those tools we can study not only the surface of the Moon but also a part of its inner structure. In this respect we learn about its history and because the formation of the Moon is closely interwoven with the formation of Earth we also learn more about our own planet.

Related links

> SIR Home Page at MPS
> Chandrayaan-1 Mission page at the Indian Space Agency
> Smart-1 page at ESA



© 2009, Max Planck Institute for
Solar System Research, Lindau
Urs Mall
29-08-2007