A Novel Radar Processing Tool for Estimating the Permittivity Profile of the Shallow Lunar Ejecta: A Case Study at the Von Kármán Crater

On 3rd of January 2019, the Lunar probe Chang’E-4 landed at Von Kármán (VK) crater at South-Pole Aitken (SPA) crater. The transient cavity of SPA has been estimated at 840-1400 km, which implies that the SPA basin excavated through the Lunar’s crust and into the mantle. Due to that, the geology of t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giannakis, Iraklis, Zhou, Feng, Warren, Craig, Giannopoulos, Antonios
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/46673/
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1451
https://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/46673/1/EGU21-1451-print.pdf
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Summary:On 3rd of January 2019, the Lunar probe Chang’E-4 landed at Von Kármán (VK) crater at South-Pole Aitken (SPA) crater. The transient cavity of SPA has been estimated at 840-1400 km, which implies that the SPA basin excavated through the Lunar’s crust and into the mantle. Due to that, the geology of the area has attracted a lot of interest, since mantle materials can provide useful insights on the mineralogical composition of the upper mantle and the formation of the Moon. Lunar Penetrating Radar (LPR) has been applied for both satellite and in situ measurement configurations resulting to fruitful insights regarding the dielectric structure of the Moon. The Yutu-2 rover from the Chang’E-4 mission is equipped with a low-frequency (60 MHz) and two high-frequency (500 MHz) antennas. Previous research [1] using the high-frequency data from the Yutu-2 rover, concluded that a homogenous ~12 m weathered layered overlays the ejecta from the near-by Finsen crater. This model is based on typical hyperbola-fitting and the lack of layers on the measured radagram for the first ~150 ns [1]. Typical hyperbola-fitting is not suitable for complex media with varying permittivity with depth. To mitigate that, we propose a novel interpretation tool that fits multiple hyperbolas simultaneously by estimating the optimum one-dimensional permittivity profile. The suggested scheme is successfully validated via a series of numerical experiments and subsequently applied to the data acquired by the Yutu-2 rover during the first two Lunar days of the mission. Four distinct layers were identified in the first ~12 m that were previously non-visible due to their smooth dielectric boundaries. This differs from previous results [1] where the first ~12 m are assumed homogeneous, part of the weathered fine-grained regolith of the Finsen crater. Based on these results, we suggest a new stratigraphic model in which the ejecta of VK L' (~ 5.5 m) were deposited on top of the Finsen ejecta. Space weathering degraded the first ~1.5 m of the ejecta ...