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Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscope on Chandrayaan-2 Rover:A Miniaturized Mid-UV to Visible Active Spectrometer for Lunar Surface Chemistry Studies


Affiliations
1 Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India
 

Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscope (LIBS) instrument flown in Chandrayaan-2 mission to the Moon, is one of the scientific instruments on the Pragyaan rover. It is primarily developed to carry out in situ investigations for the elemental composition study of lunar regolith and pebbles on the Moon surface in a previously unexplored high latitude area in the southern polar region. A pulsed laser source, a set of optical lenses and mirrors, an aberrationcorrected concave holographic grating and a linear detector, are the principal electro-optical accessories of the instrument. The developed LIBS is a lightweighted (~1.1 kg) and low power consuming (≤1.2 W) compact instrument. This paper presents the system engineering and development aspects of the LIBS instrument along with results from environmental tests. Performance evaluation of the instrument during endto- end testing is satisfactory and within desired specifications. Details on ground calibration techniques used to evaluate the instrument capability are also presented.

Keywords

Chandrayaan-2 Mission, Laser-Induced Ablation, Moon, Plasma Emission, Spectroscopy.
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Abstract Views: 395

PDF Views: 142




  • Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscope on Chandrayaan-2 Rover:A Miniaturized Mid-UV to Visible Active Spectrometer for Lunar Surface Chemistry Studies

Abstract Views: 395  |  PDF Views: 142

Authors

A. S. Laxmiprasad
Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India
R. V. L. N. Sridhar
Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India
Adwaita Goswami
Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India
K. A. Lohar
Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India
M. V. H. Rao
Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India
K. V. Shila
Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India
Monika Mahajan
Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India
Bijoy Raha
Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India
T. S. Smaran
Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India
B. Krishnamprasad
Laboratory for Electro-Optics Systems, Indian Space Research Organisation, Bengaluru 560 058, India

Abstract


Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscope (LIBS) instrument flown in Chandrayaan-2 mission to the Moon, is one of the scientific instruments on the Pragyaan rover. It is primarily developed to carry out in situ investigations for the elemental composition study of lunar regolith and pebbles on the Moon surface in a previously unexplored high latitude area in the southern polar region. A pulsed laser source, a set of optical lenses and mirrors, an aberrationcorrected concave holographic grating and a linear detector, are the principal electro-optical accessories of the instrument. The developed LIBS is a lightweighted (~1.1 kg) and low power consuming (≤1.2 W) compact instrument. This paper presents the system engineering and development aspects of the LIBS instrument along with results from environmental tests. Performance evaluation of the instrument during endto- end testing is satisfactory and within desired specifications. Details on ground calibration techniques used to evaluate the instrument capability are also presented.

Keywords


Chandrayaan-2 Mission, Laser-Induced Ablation, Moon, Plasma Emission, Spectroscopy.

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv118%2Fi4%2F573-581