Detection and Quantification of Volatiles at Mars using a multispectral LIDAR

We present a concept for using a polarization sensitive multispectral lidar to map the seasonal distribution and exchange of volatiles among the reservoirs of the Martian surface and atmosphere. The LIDAR instrument will be a multi-wavelength, altitude-resolved, active near-infrared (NIR, with 10 ba...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brown, Adrian J., Michaels, Timothy, Fenton, Lori, Hayne, Paul O., Piqueux, Sylvain, Titus, Timothy N., Wolff, Michael J., Clancy, R. Todd, Videen, Gorden, Sun, Wenbo, Haberle, Robert, Colaprete, Anthony, Richardson, Mark I., Byrne, Shane, Dissly, Richard, Beck, Steve, Grund, Chris
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: arXiv 2016
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1612.07147
https://arxiv.org/abs/1612.07147
Description
Summary:We present a concept for using a polarization sensitive multispectral lidar to map the seasonal distribution and exchange of volatiles among the reservoirs of the Martian surface and atmosphere. The LIDAR instrument will be a multi-wavelength, altitude-resolved, active near-infrared (NIR, with 10 bands around 1.6 microns) instrument to measure the reflected intensity and polarization of backscattered radiation from planetary surfaces and atmospheres. The proposed instrument would be ideally suited for a mission to Mars to comprehensively investigate the nature and seasonal distributions of volatiles and aerosols. The investigation would include the abundance of atmospheric dust and condensed volatiles, surface and cloud/aerosol grain sizes and shapes, ice and dust particle microphysics and also variations in atmospheric chemistry during multiple overflight local times throughout polar night and day. Such an instrument would be ideal for mapping and detection of recently detected CO2 frost phenomena and H2O and CO2 precipitation events in the polar regions of Mars. Herein we discuss the applicability of this instrument to detect and map sublimation/deposition 'mode flips' recently discovered by Brown et al. (2016) using the CRISM passive infrared sensor on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. : 9 pages, 3 figures