4.6 Article

Moon Diver: Exploring a pit's exposed strata to understand lunar volcanism

Journal

ACTA ASTRONAUTICA
Volume 211, Issue -, Pages 163-176

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actaastro.2023.05.042

Keywords

Lunar pit exploration; Exploring exposed strata; Rappelling rover; Lunar secondary-crust evolution

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Natural pits on the Moon provide opportunities to study the lunar maria and access subsurface lava tubes. The Moon Diver mission aims to explore the Mare Tranquillitatis pit, using pinpoint landing and robotic exploration to examine the bedrock layers. The mission utilizes innovative capabilities such as terrain-relative navigation, a tethered robotic explorer, and instruments for elemental analysis and mineralogy.
Natural pits on the Moon expose deep cross-sections of the lunar maria, enabling direct investigation of the Moon's volcanic history and providing potential access to subsurface lava tubes. The Moon Diver mission concept seeks to explore the Mare Tranquillitatis pit, which exposes the largest wall of bedrock of the mare pits (similar to 65 m). The concept is enabled by two innovative capabilities: pinpoint landing near the pit and robotic access to its nearvertical wall with an instrument package to examine the elemental chemistry, mineralogy, and morphology of these bedrock layers. Pinpoint landing uses closed-loop guidance with terrain-relative navigation (TRN), which was advanced by Perseverance landing on Mars, to deliver the lander within a 100-m ellipse. The Axel robotic explorer, which remains tethered to the lander, would egress onto the lunar surface and traverse the relatively flat terrain to the pit's funnel entrance. The lander, which is the data link to Earth, also serves as an anchor and provides power and communication to the rover through its tether. The rover is a novel two-wheeled platform with a trailing boom and a spool that pays out the tether as the rover traverses toward the pit. The 300-m long tether is well margined for the rover to scale the pit wall. The rover carries a surface preparation tool and three additional instrument types: (a) three high-resolution cameras 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 (APXS) for elemental composition, and (c) a multi-spectral microscopic imager (MMI) that uses controlled lighting for mineralogy. The surface-preparation tool removes dust and patina from the rock wall by grinding a small area. This tool, the MMI, and the APXS would be deployed from an instrument bay inside the wheel wells. The rover would independently point each instrument at the same target on the wall with millimeter repeatability. Landing shortly after sunrise, the surface mission timeline is just shy of a lunar daytime (14 Earth days). Beyond the primary mission, the rover would be capable of descending from the overhang and peering into the void that may open to a large cave or lava tube. Lunar pits provide an exciting new target for exploration using innovative robotic capabilities that have been tested with integrated science instruments at multiple terrestrial analogue sites including a pit with basaltic layers in Arizona.

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