24 research outputs found
Metallic Species, Oxygen and Silicon in the Lunar Exosphere: Upper Limits and Prospects for LADEE Measurements
The only species that have been so far detected in the lunar exosphere are Na, K, Ar,and He. However, models for the production and loss of species derived from the lunarregolith through micrometeoroid impact vaporization, sputtering, and photon-stimulateddesorption, predict that a host of other species should exist in the lunar exosphere.Assuming that loss processes are limited to ballistic escape, photoionization, and recyclingto the surface, we have computed column abundances and compared them to publishedupper limits for the Moon. Only for Ca do modeled abundances clearly exceed theavailable measurements. This result suggests the relevance of some loss processes thatwere not included in the model, such as the possibility of gas-to-solid phasecondensation during micrometeoroid impacts or the formation of stable metallic oxides.Our simulations and the recalculation of efficiencies for resonant light scattering showthat models for other species studied are not well constrained by existingmeasurements. This fact underlines the need for improved remote and in situmeasurements of the lunar exosphere such as those planned by the Lunar Atmosphereand Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) spacecraft. Our simulations of the LADEEneutral mass spectrometer and visibleultraviolet spectrometer indicate that LADEE measurements promise to provide definitive observations or set stringent upper limitsfor all regolith-driven exospheric species. We predict that observations by LADEE willconstrain assumed model parameters for the exosphere of the Moon
Understanding Mercury's Exosphere: Models Derived from MESSENGER Observations
The observations of Mercury's exosphere described in Chapter 14 have led to many modeling efforts. Early models were based upon a few simple assumptions and primarily explored the dynamics of sodium atoms pushed anti-sunward by radiation pressure [Ip, 1986; Smyth and Marconi, 1995]. More recently, these early models have been superseded by simulations with an increasing number of interdependent source processes [Leblanc and Johnson, 2003; Mura et al., 2009; Leblanc and Johnson, 2010; Burger et al., 2010, 2012, 2014]. We briefly summarize the source and loss processes before describing the published exosphere models, first for the three species observed almost continuously during the MESSENGER mission by the Ultraviolet and Visible Spectrometer (UVVS) channel of the Mercury Atmospheric and Surface Composition2Spectrometer (MASCS), (Na, Mg and Ca), and then more briefly for other species that have been observed or for which new upper limits have been derived.15.1 Overview of Source and Loss Processes15.1.1 Source Processes15.1.1.1 Thermal DesorptionThermal desorption (or thermal evaporation) is the release of adsorbed atoms from a surface via heating. Thermal desorption is related to the binding energy of the atom on the surface and the vibrational frequency of the bound atom, such that the rate of thermal desorption is given by, (15.1)where TD
Mercury's Sodium Exosphere: Observations during the MESSENGER Orbital Phase
The MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging (MESSENGER) spacecraft entered into orbit about Mercury on March 18,2011. We now have approximately five Mercury years of data from orbit. Prior to the MESSENGER mission, Mercury's surface-bounded exosphere was known to contain H, He, Na. K, and Ca. The Ultraviolet and Visible Spectrometer (UVVS) began routine orbital observations of both the dayside and nightside exosphere on March 29. 2011, measuring altitude profiles for all previously detected neutral species except for He and K. We focus here on what we have learned about the sodium exosphere: its spatial, seasonal, and sporadic variation. Observations to date permit delineation of the relative roles of photon-stimulated desorption (PSD) and impact vaporization (IV) from seasonal and spatial effects, as well as of the roles of ions both as sputtering agents and in their possible role to enhance the efficiency of PSD. Correlations of Mercury's neutral sodium exosphere with measurements from MESSENGER's Magnetometer (MAG) and Energetic Particle and Plasma Spectrometer (EPPS) provide insight into the roles of ions and electrons. Models incorporating MAG observations provide a basis for identifying the location and area of the surface exposed to solar wind plasma, and EPPS observations reveal episodic populations of energetic electrons in the magnetosphere and the presence of planetary He(+), 0(+), and Na(+)
Observations of Mercury's Exosphere: Composition and Structure
Mercury is surrounded by a tenuous exosphere in which particles travel on ballistic trajectories under the influence of a combination of gravity and solar radiation pressure. The densities are so small that the surface forms the exobase and particles in the exosphere are more likely to collide with it rather than with each other. For a planet with a more substantial collision-dominated atmosphere, a population of particles that enters from below the exobase supplies the exosphere. In contrast Mercury's exosphere is supplied both by incoming sources including the solar wind (hydrogen and helium), micrometeoroids (dust), meteoroids and cornets, and by particles released from the surface through a variety of processes that include sputtering by solar wind ions, desorption by solar photons and electrons, impacts by micrometeoroids, and thermal desorption of surface materials. These source processes are balanced by loss processes, which include impact with and sticking to the surface, Jeans (or thermal) escape, ionization followed by transport along magnetic field lines, and acceleration by solar radiation pressure to escape velocity. Ground-based attempts to detect an atmosphere around Mercury before Mariner 10 first visited the planet in 1974 were unsuccessful and led only to increasingly tight upper limits, culminating in a limiting value for surface atmospheric pressure of 0.015 Pascal (Pa) determined by Fink et al. (1974)
Oxygen- and capacity-limited thermal tolerance: blurring ecology and physiology
No abstract available
Lunar Volatiles and Solar System Science
Understanding the origin and evolution of the lunar volatile system is not
only compelling lunar science, but also fundamental Solar System science. This
white paper (submitted to the US National Academies' Decadal Survey in
Planetary Science and Astrobiology 2023-2032) summarizes recent advances in our
understanding of lunar volatiles, identifies outstanding questions for the next
decade, and discusses key steps required to address these questions
Evidence Connecting Mercury's Magnesium Exosphere to Its Magnesium-Rich Surface Terrane
Mercury is surrounded by a tenuous, collisionless exosphere where the surface of the planet is directly exposed to the space environment. As a consequence, impacts and space weathering processes are expected to eject atoms and molecules from the surface into the exosphere, implying a direct link between the exospheric composition and the planet's regolith material. However, observational evidence demonstrating this link has been elusive. Here we report that exospheric magnesium, a species recently discovered and systematically measured by the Mercury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging mission, is enhanced when observed over a portion of the planet's surface regolith rich in magnesium. These observations confirm a direct link between Mercury's magnesium exosphere and the underlying crustal surface composition, providing strong evidence supporting theoretical arguments that impact vaporization can directly supply material to the exosphere from the regolith of a rocky, airless body