The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Mission Camera

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The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) mission is scheduled for launch in October. 2008 as a first step to return humans to the Moon by 2018. The main goals ...
Investigating the Moon With new Eyes: The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Mission Camera (LROC) H. Hiesinger (1,2), M.S. Robinson (3), A.S. McEwen (4), E.P. Turtle (4), E.M. Eliason (4), B.L. Jolliff (5), M.C. Malin (6), and P.C. Thomas (7) (1) Brown Univ., Dept. of Geological Sciences, Providence RI 02912, [email protected], (2) Westfaelische Wilhelms-University, (3) Northwestern Univ., (4) LPL, Univ. of Arizona, (5) Washington Univ., (6) Malin Space Science Systems, (7) Cornell Univ.

The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) mission is scheduled for launch in October 2008 as a first step to return humans to the Moon by 2018. The main goals of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) are to: 1) assess meter and smallerscale features for safety analyses for potential lunar landing sites near polar resources, and elsewhere on the Moon; and 2) acquire multi-temporal images of the poles to characterize the polar illumination environment (100 m scale), identifying regions of permanent shadow and permanent or near permanent illumination over a full lunar year. In addition, LROC will return six high-value datasets such as 1) meter-scale maps of regions of permanent or near permanent illumination of polar massifs; 2) high resolution topography through stereogrammetric and photometric stereo analyses for potential landing sites; 3) a global multispectral map in 7 wavelengths (300-680 nm) to characterize lunar resources, in particular ilmenite; 4) a global 100-m/pixel basemap with incidence angles (60-80 degree) favorable for morphologic interpretations; 5) images of a variety of geologic units at sub-meter resolution to investigate physical properties and regolith variability; and 6) meter-scale coverage overlapping with Apollo Panoramic images (1-2 m/pixel) to document the number of small impacts since 1971-1972, to estimate hazards for future surface operations. LROC consists of two narrow-angle cameras (NACs) which will provide 0.5-m scale panchromatic images over a 5-km swath, a wide-angle camera (WAC) to acquire images at about 100 m/pixel in seven color bands over a 100-km swath, and a common Sequence and Compressor System (SCS). Each NAC has a 700-mm-focal-length optic that images onto a 5000-pixel CCD line-array, providing a cross-track field-of-view (FOV) of 2.86 degree. The NAC readout noise is better than 100 e− , and the data are sampled at 12 bits. Its internal buffer holds 256 MB of uncompressed data, enough for a full-swath image 25-km long or a 2x2 binned image 100-km long. The WAC has two 6-mmfocal-length lenses imaging onto the same 1000 x 1000 pixel, electronically shuttered CCD area-array, one imaging in the visible/near IR, and the other in the UV. Each has a cross-track FOV of 90 degree. From the nominal 50-km orbit, the WAC will have a resolution of 100 m/pixel in the visible, and a swath width of ∼100 km. The seven-band color capability of the WAC is achieved by color filters mounted directly 1

over the detector, providing different sections of the CCD with different filters [1]. The readout noise is less than 40 e− , and, as with the NAC, pixel values are digitized to 12-bits and may be subsequently converted to 8-bit values. The total mass of the LROC system is about 12 kg; the total LROC power consumption averages at 22 W (30 W peak). Assuming a downlink with lossless compression, LRO will produce a total of 20 TeraBytes (TB) of raw data. Production of higher-level data products will result in a total of 70 TB for Planetary Data System (PDS) archiving, 100 times larger than any previous missions. [1] Malin et al., JGR, 106, 17651-17672, 2001.

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