4.5 Article

An empirical thermal correction model for Moon Mineralogy Mapper data constrained by laboratory spectra and Diviner temperatures

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 121, Issue 10, Pages 2081-2107

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016JE005035

Keywords

thermal correction; Moon Mineralogy Mapper; LRO Diviner; bolometric temperature; surface anisothermality; the Moon

Funding

  1. NASA LASER program grant [NNX12AK75G]
  2. NASA [43720, NNX12AK75G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Radiance measured by the Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M-3) at wavelengths beyond similar to 2 mu m commonly includes both solar reflected and thermally emitted contributions from the lunar surface. Insufficient correction (removal) of the thermal contribution can modify and even mask absorptions at these wavelengths in derived surface reflectance spectra, an effect that precludes accurate identification and analysis of OH and/or H2O absorptions. This study characterized thermal effects in M-3 data by evaluating surface temperatures measured independently by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Diviner radiometer, and results confirm that M-3 data (Level 2) currently available in the Planetary Data System often contain significant thermal contributions. It is impractical to use independent Diviner measurements to correct all M-3 images for the Moon because not every M-3 pixel has a corresponding Diviner measurement acquired at the same local time of lunar day. Therefore, a new empirical model, constrained by Diviner data, has been developed based on the correlation of reflectance at 1.55 mu m and at 2.54 mu m observed in laboratory reflectance spectra of Apollo and Luna soil and glass-rich samples. Reflectance values at these wavelengths follow a clear power law, , for a wide range of lunar sample compositions and maturity. A nearly identical power law is observed in M-3 reflectance data that have been independently corrected by using Diviner-based temperatures, confirming that this is a general reflectance property of materials that typify the lunar surface. These results demonstrate that reflectance at a thermally affected wavelength (2.54 mu m) can be predicted within 2% (absolute) based on reflectance values at shorter wavelengths where thermal contributions are negligible and reflectance is dominant. Radiance at 2.54 mu m that is in excess of the expected amount is assumed to be due to thermal emission and is removed during conversion of at-sensor radiance to reflectance or I/F. Removal of this thermal contribution by using this empirically based model provides a more accurate view of surface reflectance properties at wavelengths >2 mu m, with the benefit that it does not require independent measurements or modeling of surface temperatures at the same local time as M-3 data were acquired. It is demonstrated that this model is appropriate for common lunar surface compositions (e.g., mare and highlands soils and pyroclastic deposits), but surface compositions with reflectance properties that deviate strongly from these cases (e.g., pyroxene-, olivine-, or spinel-rich locations with minimal space weathering) may require the use of more sophisticated thermal correction models or overlapping Diviner temperature estimates.

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