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Moon Mineralogy Mapper
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Overview
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Science
Lunar Crust
Basaltic Volcanism
Volatiles
Crater Mapping
New Minerals
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Science
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M3 Goals spacer Science Objectives spacer Approach spacer Measurement Requirements spacer Baseline Return spacer Results
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GEOLOGIC EVOLUTION
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Crust spacer Characterize lunar highland rocks in context of geologic processes. spacer Resolve diagnostic near-infrared mineral absorption bands of primary highland rocks. spacer Reflectance of surface 0.7 to 2.6 microns at <200 m spatial and <30 nm spectral resolution. spacer Global crustal mineralogy @ 140 m/pixel; targeted areas at 70 m/pixel. spacer Geologic processes of crustal evolution constrained.
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Basalts spacer Identify and characterize the diversity of lunar volcanism. spacer Resolve diagnostic mineral absorption bands of basalts and estimate TiO2 of mare soils. spacer Reflectance of surface 0.43 to 2.6 microns at <200m and < 30 nm spectral resolution. spacer Global basalt mineralogy @ 140 m/pixel; targeted areas at 70 m/pixel. spacer Basaltic volcanism (mantle source) constrained in time and space.
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Volatiles spacer Identify and map the presence of hydrous phases. spacer Detect trace amounts (of H2O and OH) from diagnostic features near 3 microns. spacer Reflectance of surface 2.6 to 3 microns @ 50 nm resolution. spacer Volatile assessment @ <280 m/pixel. spacer Recent comet activity and volatile deposits identified (if present).
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Fresh Craters spacer Evaluate the recent impact flux at 1 AU. spacer Map the frequency of recent impactors by identifying fresh craters <0.5 km. spacer Reflectance of surface 400-2500 nm; global coverage at ~<200m. spacer Global maps of soil maturity index at 140 m/pixel. spacer Potential hazard of 50 m NEOs at 1 AU is assessed.
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Unknown spacer Identify areas of rare or unseen lunar materials. spacer Resolve diagnostic mineral absorption bands and compare with known species. spacer Reflectance of surface 0.5 to 2.6 microns at < 200 m spatial and 30 nm spectral resolution. spacer Global mineralogy assessment @ 140 m/pixel; targeted areas at 70 m/pixel. spacer New planetary processes and products identified; resource potential evaluated.
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RESOURCES
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Polar spacer Determine if polar H is H2O. spacer Detect trace amounts of H2O and OH (if present) from diagnostic features near 3 microns. spacer Reflectance of surface 2.6 to 3 microns @ 50 nm resolution. [light source is scattered radiation from rim]. spacer Repeated polar measurement of 3 µm feature constrains OH, H2O presence. spacer Hydrous phases (if present) detected unambiguously.
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Local spacer Identify and map areas with diverse “feedstock” available. spacer Map the composition across potential landing sites at high spatial resolution. spacer Reflectance of surface 0.43 to 2.6 microns at <100m spatial and 10 nm spectral resolution. spacer Composition of regions of interest mapped 70 m/pixel. spacer Optimum areas for surface “sorties” identified.
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The Moon is the smallest of the rocky worlds that populate the inner solar system. Interesting in its own right as our nearest celestial neighbor, the Moon can also shed light on the development of Earth and the other terrestrial planets. Comparing the Moon to the bigger planets can help us understand the processes that shaped all of them.

Like Earth and its neighbors, the Moon underwent differentiation (separation into layers of crust, mantle, and core) early in its formation history and then experienced volcanic processes which partially recoated its surface. But unlike the more dynamic Venus, Earth and Mars, the Moon stopped at that point. Undisturbed by plate tectonics, flowing water or weathering, its surface preserves a record of those early stages of planetary development. Also preserved are records of the meteorite impacts that the Moon -- and presumably all planets in the inner solar system -- endured over the last 4 billion years.

Conveniently close and conducive to study, the Moon is probably the only planetary body we can go to with relative ease for a comprehensive analysis of how it was put together. For planetary scientists, it is a treasure trove of historical information available nowhere else. M3 will provide one of the most important keys to that treasure.

Mineralogy records the geologic character and evolution of a planet, and M3 will characterize lunar mineralogy in a spatial context, drawing relationships between visible landforms and their mineral composition. The instrument will provide scientists their first opportunity to study the Moon's surface at high spatial and spectral resolution, making spectroscopic measurements of lunar minerals in the visible and near-infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum, while simultaneously mapping the distribution of these materials across the surface. This information will greatly expand our understanding of the Moon and the inner solar system, and will provide a much-needed long-term baseline for future exploration activities.

One of the most persistent mysteries about the Moon is its origin. Scientists generally agree that the Moon formed from material that splashed into space when Earth was struck by an object the size of Mars. However, many important details about the Moon's formation and development remain unknown. Information from M3 will help to constrain competing models of the Moon's beginnings.

Rock and soil samples returned by the U.S. Apollo and Soviet Luna missions have provided information about the Moon's composition that is quite detailed, but restricted to a very limited region on the equatorial nearside. The more recent Clementine and Lunar Prospector missions supplied remote-sensing data of the entire surface, but at very low spectral and spatial resolution. M3 will provide data that build on the foundation of this earlier work, are not duplicated by other missions currently underway, fulfill an essential need in lunar exploration planning, and are of great scientific interest.

Goals & Objectives

The Moon Mineralogy Mapper's primary science goal is to characterize and map the mineral composition of the lunar surface to gain information about the Moon's geologic evolution. This broad topic has five distinct themes:

  1. Evaluate primary crustal components and their distribution across the highlands.
  2. Characterize the diversity and extent of different types of basaltic volcanism.
  3. Identify and assess deposits containing volatiles (easily evaporated materials).
  4. Map fresh craters to assess the abundance of small impacts in the recent past.
  5. Identify and evaluate concentrations of unusual or unexpected minerals.

In addition to these science goals, M3 will address a primary exploration goal:

Assess the mineral resources of the Moon at high spatial resolution.

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