The Emirates Mars Mission (EMM) Emirates Mars InfraRed Spectrometer (EMIRS) Instrument

被引:0
|
作者
Christopher S. Edwards
Philip R. Christensen
Greg L. Mehall
Saadat Anwar
Eman Al Tunaiji
Khalid Badri
Heather Bowles
Stillman Chase
Zoltan Farkas
Tara Fisher
John Janiczek
Ian Kubik
Kelly Harris-Laurila
Andrew Holmes
Igor Lazbin
Edgar Madril
Mark McAdam
Mark Miner
William O’Donnell
Carlos Ortiz
Daniel Pelham
Mehul Patel
Kathryn Powell
Ken Shamordola
Tom Tourville
Michael D. Smith
Nathan Smith
Rob Woodward
Aaron Weintraub
Heather Reed
Emily B. Pilinski
机构
[1] Northern Arizona University,Department of Physics and Astronomy
[2] Arizona State University,School of Earth and Space Exploration
[3] Emirates Institute for Advanced Science and Technology,Mohammed bin Rashid Space Center
[4] Arizona Space Technologies,Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics
[5] Goddard Space Flight Center,undefined
[6] University of Colorado Boulder,undefined
来源
Space Science Reviews | 2021年 / 217卷
关键词
Mars; Atmosphere; EMM; Emirates Mars Infrared Spectrometer;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Emirates Mars Mission Emirates Mars Infrared Spectrometer (EMIRS) will provide remote measurements of the martian surface and lower atmosphere in order to better characterize the geographic and diurnal variability of key constituents (water ice, water vapor, and dust) along with temperature profiles on sub-seasonal timescales. EMIRS is a FTIR spectrometer covering the range from 6.0-100+ μm (1666-100 cm−1) with a spectral sampling as high as 5 cm−1 and a 5.4-mrad IFOV and a 32.5×32.5 mrad FOV. The EMIRS optical path includes a flat 45° pointing mirror to enable one degree of freedom and has a +/- 60° clear aperture around the nadir position which is fed to a 17.78-cm diameter Cassegrain telescope. The collected light is then fed to a flat-plate based Michelson moving mirror mounted on a dual linear voice-coil motor assembly. An array of deuterated L-alanine doped triglycine sulfate (DLaTGS) pyroelectric detectors are used to sample the interferogram every 2 or 4 seconds (depending on the spectral sampling selected). A single 0.846 μm laser diode is used in a metrology interferometer to provide interferometer positional control, sampled at 40 kHz (controlled at 5 kHz) and infrared signal sampled at 625 Hz. The EMIRS beamsplitter is a 60-mm diameter, 1-mm thick 1-arcsecond wedged chemical vapor deposited diamond with an antireflection microstructure to minimize first surface reflection. EMIRS relies on an instrumented internal v-groove blackbody target for a full-aperture radiometric calibration. The radiometric precision of a single spectrum (in 5 cm−1 mode) is <3.0×10−8 W cm−2 sr−1/cm−1 between 300 and 1350 cm−1 over instrument operational temperatures (<∼0.5 K NEΔ\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$\Delta $\end{document}T @ 250 K). The absolute integrated radiance error is < 2% for scene temperatures ranging from 200-340 K. The overall EMIRS envelope size is 52.9×37.5×34.6 cm and the mass is 14.72 kg including the interface adapter plate. The average operational power consumption is 22.2 W, and the standby power consumption is 18.6 W with a 5.7 W thermostatically limited, always-on operational heater. EMIRS was developed by Arizona State University and Northern Arizona University in collaboration with the Mohammed bin Rashid Space Centre with Arizona Space Technologies developing the electronics. EMIRS was integrated, tested and radiometrically calibrated at Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Thermal Infrared Imaging Spectrometer for Mars Orbiter Mission
    Singh, R. P.
    Sarkar, Somya S.
    Kumar, Manoj
    Saxena, Anish
    Rao, U. S. H.
    Bhardwaj, Arun
    Desai, Jalshri
    Sharma, Jitendra
    Patel, Amul
    Shinde, Yogesh
    Arora, Hemant
    Srinivas, A. R.
    Rathi, Jaya
    Patel, Hitesh
    Sarkar, Meenakshi
    Gajaria, Arpita
    Moorthi, S. Manthira
    Pandya, Mehul R.
    Gujrati, Ashwin
    Chauhan, Prakash
    Saji, Kuriakose A.
    Samudraiah, D. R. M.
    Kumar, A. S. Kiran
    CURRENT SCIENCE, 2015, 109 (06): : 1097 - 1105
  • [22] Emirates Mars Mission takes first high-resolution images of Martian moon Deimos
    Blaustein, Richard
    PHYSICS WORLD, 2023, 36 (06) : 11 - 11
  • [23] The SuperCam infrared spectrometer for the perseverance rover of the Mars2020 mission
    Fouchet, Thierry
    Reess, Jean-Michel
    Montmessin, Franck
    Hassen-Khodja, Rafik
    Nguyen-Tuong, Napoleon
    Humeau, Olivier
    Jacquinod, Sophie
    Lapauw, Laurent
    Parisot, Jerome
    Bonafous, Marion
    Bernardi, Pernelle
    Chapron, Frederic
    Jeanneau, Alexandre
    Collin, Claude
    Zeganadin, Didier
    Nibert, Patricia
    Abbaki, Sadok
    Montaron, Christophe
    Blanchard, Cyrille
    Arslanyan, Vartan
    Achelhi, Ourdya
    Colon, Claudine
    Royer, Clement
    Hamm, Vincent
    Beuzit, Mehdi
    Poulet, Francois
    Pilorget, Cedric
    Mandon, Lucia
    Forni, Olivier
    Cousin, Agnes
    Gasnault, Olivier
    Pilleri, Paolo
    Dubois, Bruno
    Quantin, Cathy
    Beck, Pierre
    Beyssac, Olivier
    Le Mouelic, Stephane
    Johnsson, Jeffrey R.
    McConnochie, Timothy H.
    Maurice, Sylvestre
    Wiens, Roger C.
    ICARUS, 2022, 373
  • [24] BIOLOGY INSTRUMENT FOR VIKING MARS MISSION
    BROWN, FS
    ADELSON, HE
    CHAPMAN, MC
    CLAUSEN, OW
    COLE, AJ
    CRAGIN, JT
    DAY, RJ
    DEBENHAM, CH
    FORTNEY, RE
    GILJE, RI
    HARVEY, DW
    KROPP, JL
    LOER, SJ
    LOGAN, JL
    POTTER, WD
    ROSIAK, GT
    REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS, 1978, 49 (02): : 139 - 182
  • [25] MArs Neutron Energy Spectrometer (MANES): an instrument for the Mars 2003 Lander
    Maurer, RH
    Roth, DR
    Kinnison, JD
    Goldsten, JO
    Gold, RE
    Fainchtein, R
    ACTA ASTRONAUTICA, 2003, 52 (2-6) : 405 - 410
  • [26] MARINER MARS 1969 INFRARED SPECTROMETER
    HERR, KC
    FORNEY, PB
    PIMENTEL, GC
    APPLIED OPTICS, 1972, 11 (03): : 493 - &
  • [27] A Frontal Dust Storm in the Northern Hemisphere at Solar Longitude 97-An Unusual Observation by the Emirates Mars Mission
    Gebhardt, C.
    Guha, B. K.
    Young, R. M. B.
    Wolff, M. J.
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2022, 49 (20)
  • [28] An AOTF-based spectrometer for the studies of Mars atmosphere for Mars express ESA mission
    Korablev, O
    Bertaux, JL
    Grigoriev, A
    Dimarellis, E
    Kalinnikov, Y
    Rodin, A
    Muller, C
    Fonteyn, D
    PLANETARY ATMOSPHERES, 2002, 29 (02): : 143 - 150
  • [29] THE SUPERCAM INFRARED INSTRUMENT ON THE NASA MARS2020 MISSION Performance and qualification results
    Reess, J. -M.
    Bonafous, M.
    Lapauw, L.
    Humeau, O.
    Fouchet, T.
    Bernardi, P.
    Cais, Ph.
    Deleuze, M.
    Forni, O.
    Maurice, S.
    Robinson, S.
    Wiens, R. C.
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SPACE OPTICS-ICSO 2018, 2018, 11180
  • [30] The Raman Laser Spectrometer for the ExoMars Rover Mission to Mars
    Rull, Fernando
    Maurice, Sylvestre
    Hutchinson, Ian
    Moral, Andoni
    Perez, Carlos
    Diaz, Carlos
    Colombo, Maria
    Belenguer, Tomas
    Lopez-Reyes, Guillermo
    Sansano, Antonio
    Forni, Olivier
    Parot, Yann
    Striebig, Nicolas
    Woodward, Simon
    Howe, Chris
    Tarcea, Nicolau
    Rodriguez, Pablo
    Seoane, Laura
    Santiago, Amaia
    Rodriguez-Prieto, Jose A.
    Medina, Jesus
    Gallego, Paloma
    Canchal, Rosario
    Santamaria, Pilar
    Ramos, Gonzalo
    Vago, Jorge L.
    ASTROBIOLOGY, 2017, 17 (6-7) : 627 - 654