“Cis-lunar” space including lunar orbit and the lunar surface is once again a strong focus
as a destination for both robotic and human space exploration
• Multiple nations are now pursuing both robotic exploration programs with spacecraft in
lunar orbit and landers on the lunar surface.
• In addition to these purely robotic exploration programs, NASA has started construction
of the Gateway space station for operations in lunar orbit and development work has
begun on the Human Landing System infrastructure which promises to return humans to
the lunar surface for the first time since the last Apollo missions in the 1970’s.
• Because the Moon has very little atmosphere and no strong intrinsic magnetic field to
protect the surface from meteoroid impacts and charge particles, respectively, the space
environments that need to be considered when designing and operating lunar
exploration missions are essentially the free-field environments used in design of
interplanetary missions
Outline
• Atmosphere
• Lunar regolith and dust
• Illumination and thermal
• Solar UV/EUV
• Ionizing radiation
o GCR
o SPE
o Albedo neutrons
• Space plasma and charging
• Meteoroid environments
o Primary impacts
o Ejecta
• DSNE Lunar Environments
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Minow_SciTech_2023 - presentation - final.pdf
1. Impacts of the Space Environment
on Lunar Exploration
Joseph I. Minow
NASA, Marshall Space Flight Center
AIAA SciTech Forum
23 – 27 January 2023, National Harbor, MD
joseph.minow@nasa.gov
Image: NASA
1
2. Introduction
• “Cis-lunar” space including lunar orbit and the lunar surface is once again a strong focus
as a destination for both robotic and human space exploration
• Multiple nations are now pursuing both robotic exploration programs with spacecraft in
lunar orbit and landers on the lunar surface.
• In addition to these purely robotic exploration programs, NASA has started construction
of the Gateway space station for operations in lunar orbit and development work has
begun on the Human Landing System infrastructure which promises to return humans to
the lunar surface for the first time since the last Apollo missions in the 1970’s.
• Because the Moon has very little atmosphere and no strong intrinsic magnetic field to
protect the surface from meteoroid impacts and charge particles, respectively, the space
environments that need to be considered when designing and operating lunar
exploration missions are essentially the free-field environments used in design of
interplanetary missions
Outline
• Atmosphere
• Lunar regolith and dust
• Illumination and thermal
• Solar UV/EUV
• Ionizing radiation
o GCR
o SPE
o Albedo neutrons
• Space plasma and charging
• Meteoroid environments
o Primary impacts
o Ejecta
• DSNE Lunar Environments
2
3. Lunar Atmosphere
• Moon’s tenuous atmosphere (exosphere) is dominated by 40Ar, He
• Peak density occurs during the lunar day
• Peak density lunar atmospheric density is similar to thermosphere density in LEO at
altitudes >1000 km (better vacuum than ISS environment around 400 km)!
Stern, 1999
D. Pettit ISS/Exp6
D. Pettit/ISS Exp6
D. Pettit/ISS Exp6
[Hodges, 1975; Stern, 1999]
[Hodges, 1975; Stern, 1999]
480 240 120 0 km
480
240
120
km
ISS
ISS
3
4. Dusty Regolith
• Formation of lunar regolith (unconsolidated surface material) is dominated by
impact processes
• Shattered material remains sharp due to lack of erosion processes
• Surface layer of loose, unconsolidated material <1 cm thick overlays ~10 m of
dense, packed regolith
• Surface is covered by an abrasive dusty layer with properties similar to
powdered glass
• Lunar regolith covers the lunar surface with bedrock visible only on the walls
of steep craters
[Hörz et al. 1991; Kring, 2006]
Apollo 17 (NASA)
4
5. Lunar Surface is Dusty
AS12-48-7133.jpg
Apollo 12 and Surveyor 3
5
6. Lunar Surface is Dusty
AS12-48-7133.jpg
Apollo 12 and Surveyor 3
6
8. Lunar Dust Properties
• Lunar dust is an issue for engineering systems for lunar environments
– Sharp, abrasive particles
– Abrasion of EVA suits, seals, and bearings
• Human health issues
– Toxic? Lung irritation, damage?
• <20 µm particles represent ~20 wt% of lunar soil
– Challenge to design systems to reduce, eliminate the <10 µm
particles in crew habitat
[Park et al., 2006]
[Park et al., 2006]
[Liu et al., 2006]
Vesicular Grains Apollo 17 70051
8
9. Dust Impacts
• Lunar dust is a challenge for long term exploration of the Moon
• EVA operations will necessarily be conducted within the dusty
surface environment
• Abrasive, glass-like material sticks to suits, irritates throat and
lungs, and can damage mechanical systems
• Dust transfer from lunar surface is spacecraft and orbital systems
will need to be mitigated
Apollo 16 (NASA)
Apollo 17
E. Cernan in LEM
following EVA (NASA)
Apollo 16 (NASA)
9
10. Lunar Orbit and Solar Elevation Angle
• The moon’s axis of rotation is tilted about 1.5o relative to the
ecliptic plane.
• The lunar orbital plane is inclined approximately 5.1o relative
to the ecliptic.
• The lunar orbital period is approximately 29 Earth days.
• The maximum sun elevation angle at the poles (1.5º) is
related to the tilt of lunar rotation axis.
• Locations at the lunar poles (of sufficient altitude) may
experience near continuous sunlight.
Mean inclination of the lunar orbit to ecliptic plane 5.145 o
Mean inclination of the lunar equator to ecliptic plane 1.542 o
Mean distance from Earth 384,403 km
Distance at perigee 364,397 km
Distance at apogee 406,731 km
Lunar Orbit Parameters
Mean orbit radius ~60 Re
[Sharp and Schunk, 2007]
10
11. Polar Illumination
Typical Sun Elevation Angle for Lunar South Pole Region
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
3
0 100 200 300
Time (days)
Angle
(deg)
89.0 deg S
89.5 deg S
90.0 deg S
N
S
Horizon
Angular
Diameter
~0.53º
Solar Elevation Angles (Typical Solar Elevation for Lunar South Pole)
Solar angular diameter (~0.53° from lunar surface) is important for considering illumination
in polar regions
Typical Sun Elevation Angle for Low/Moderate Latitudes on the Moon
-90
-70
-50
-30
-10
10
30
50
70
90
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Time (days)
Angle
(deg)
Equator
30 deg N
45 deg N
60 deg N
Elevation angle
Apparent
Horizon
Elevation
Angle
Normal
[Sharp and Schunk, 2007]
11
12. Polar Axis of Rotation
Sun Vector
Sun Vector
Eternal Light and Dark
• Depending on altitude, lunar polar regions may have continuous (or near continuous) sunlight or darkness
1.5o
Sun
S
South Pole Winter
N
1.5o
Sun
S
South Pole Summer N
[Sharp and Schunk, 2007]
• Local topography is important on the Moon
• Moon is nearly spherical
• Local variation in topography are great than
the figure of the Moon
– Earth: geoid +/- ~10 km from sphere
– Moon: geoid +/- ~0 km from sphere
Altitude variations of ~10 km occur
within few hundred km of lunar south
pole
Peak Prom-
inence
Height
Everest 8.85 km 8.85 km
Aconcagua 6.96 km 6.96 km
Denali 6.14 km 6.19 km
Mount
Kilimanjaro
5.86 km 5.90 km
Pico Cristobal
Colon
5.51 km 5.70 km
Mount Logan 5.25 km 5.96 km
Pico de Orizaba 4.92 km 5.64 km
Vinson Massif 4.89 km 4.89 km
Puncak Jaya 4.88 km 4.88 km
Mount Elbrus 4.74 km 5.64 km
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mount
ain_peaks_by_prominence
12
13. Thermal LRO/Diviner Global Instantaneous
Lunar Surface Temperatures
Williams et al., 2017
UCLA/NASA/JPL/GSFC
LRO/Diviner Lunar South Pole
Temperature Map
Stalcup, 2022
• Extreme lunar surface temperatures due to the lack of an
appreciable atmosphere and the long period of cooling during the
lunar night
• Mean equatorial temperatures
– Daytime maximum ~387 – 397 K
– Daytime minimum ~ 95K
• Mean polar temperatures
– Maximum 202K
– Minimum 50K
• Extreme cold in permanently shadowed regions within craters at
the lunar poles
– Minimum ~ 18 K to 20 K
13
14. Lunar South Pole
[adapted from Bussey et al., LPSC 1999]
• >70% illumination on rim of Shackleton Crater
• T ~ 220±10 K (-53±10ºC)…relatively benign!
– Compare with terrestrial extreme of
146 K (-127ºC) at Vostok, Antarctica
• Night temperatures near equator are T~ 100K
• T~40K to 50K in permanently dark craters (more recent LRO data shows
extreme low temperatures to ~18 to 20K)
Light
Dark
[Bussey et al., GRL, 1999]
Longest period of shadow ~49 hours
based on ~29.5day/Sol or 12.2 deg/day
[Dale, 2nd Space Expl. Conf., 2006] 14
15. Terrain Shadowing at Shackleton Crater Rim
• Mapping required for evaluation of processes involving illumination that impact exploration operations
– Illumination conditions for landing operations
– EVA worksite illumination
– Photovoltaic power system designs (power production and storage requirements)
– Photoelectron emission processes involved in spacecraft charging
– Wake charging of vehicles, habitats, and EVA systems
[Fincannon, 2007]
[Fincannon, 2007]
Site A1, Shackleton Rim
Plasma wake ~2.3 day duration
15
16. Solar UV/EUV/XUV Spectrum
• Lunar surface exposed to the Sun is exposed to the full flux of solar
photons without an atmosphere to absorb the photons at
ultraviolet wavelengths
• Short wavelength UV/EUV/XUV photons with sufficient energy to
damage materials exhibit solar cycle variations
• Short wavelength photons do not penetrate deeply into materials,
UV light is primarily an issue for material surfaces and thin
materials
• Materials used in lunar orbit or on the lunar surface will need to be
UV-resistant or shielded from UV photons
Solar2000 (S2K) Model*
• Static ASTM E490 visible spectrum
• Variable XUV/EUV/UV spectrum
*Tobiska, 2000
Dever et al., 2002
Teflon FEP
XUV EUV UV visible
Minow and Edwards, 2008
16
17. Ionizing Radiation Environments
• Radiation environments relevant to lunar missions in approximate order
of decreasing energy and increasing flux:
– Galactic cosmic rays 100’s MeV to GeV
– Solar particle events 10’s MeV to 100’s MeV
– Earth radiation belts (transit) 10’s keV to 100’s MeV
– Solar wind, magnetosheath, 10’s eV to 1 MeV
and magnetotail
• Moon has no intrinsic magnetic field or appreciable atmosphere
• Radiation environment on the Moon is about 50% of the interplanetary
environment due to shielding by the Moon
• Albedo neutrons are an additional radiation environment in spacecraft
and on the lunar surface
• Operating in lunar orbit and on the lunar surface is essentially the same
as operating in interplanetary space with respect to the space radiation
environment
Wilson, 1978
https://space.nss.org/settlement/nasa/
75SummerStudy/Chapt.2.html 17
18. Solar Cycle Variation in GCR and SPE Flux
• Galactic Cosmic Rays
– 0.1 - >10 GeV
– Anti-correlated with solar cycle
– Small variation in flux
• Solar Energetic Particles
– 1-100 MeV
– Correlated with solar cycle
– Large variation in flux
https://izw1.caltech.edu/ACE/ASC/browse/view_browse_data.html
https://izw1.caltech.edu/ACE/ACENews/ACENews83.html
Cycle 23 Cycle 24
ACE Browse Data from 1997/237 to 2022/360
18
19. Coronal Mass Ejections
[http://www.srl.caltech.edu/ACE/ACENews/ACENews55.html]
CME Simulation
[Townsend et al.]
Oct 89 1 g/cm2 (3.7 mm Al)
• Impulsive events
– Minutes to hours
– Electron rich
– ~1000/yr at solar max
• Gradual events: significant impact on exploration!
– Days
– Proton rich
– ~100/year
-1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 R (AU)
R
(AU)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
SOHO, LASCO
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
Time (hours)
0
400
800
1200
1600
Dose
(cGy)
Proton
Flux
(p/cm2-sec-sr)
105
104
103
102
101
100
104
105
19
20. [http://www.srl.caltech.edu/ACE/ACENews/ACENews55.html]
CME Simulation
[Townsend et al.]
Oct 89 1 g/cm2 (3.7 mm Al)
• Impulsive events
– Minutes to hours
– Electron rich
– ~1000/yr at solar max
• Gradual events: significant impact on exploration!
– Days
– Proton rich
– ~100/year
-1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 R (AU)
R
(AU)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
SOHO, LASCO
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
Time (hours)
0
400
800
1200
1600
Dose
(cGy)
Proton
Flux
(p/cm2-sec-sr)
105
104
103
102
101
100
104
105
avionics
crew
Coronal Mass Ejections
20
21. Angular Variations in SPE Flux
• SPE particles initially exhibit anisotropic angular
distributions at SPE onset with the particles arriving in a
narrow range of angles about the interplanetary (solar)
magnetic field direction
• The angular distributions evolve into isotropic angular
distributions with a few hours due to pitch angle
scattering
• Impact on SPE shielding
– Topography such as mountain, crater wall, or berm
provides some protection for crew by reducing the
flux
– Once the SPE is isotropic near the peak flux there is
radiation arriving from all directions not blocked by
the Moon itselt
– Radiation shielding needs to factor in the isotropic
nature of SPEs
21
Smart and Shea, 2015
Evolution of Proton Anisotropy
23. Parnell et al., 1998
Regolith Shielding Properties for GCR
23
24. Lunar Neutron Environments
• Albedo neutrons are generated by nuclear interactions of GCR
and SPE ions with lunar regolith
• Modeling shows neutrons to be a significant contribution on
the order of 10% to 30% for total effective dose for large
shielding thickness
• Long term exploration will benefit from a better
understanding of the albedo neutron environment
– Past efforts to measure lunar albedo neutrons have only
extended to energies of 15 or 20 MeV
– In-situ measurements of the secondary neutron
environment on the lunar surface extending beyond tens to
hundreds of MeV to GeV energies are needed to support
dose estimates for long-term lunar exploration
• A single mission is adequate to characterize the albedo
environment since the goal is primarily to validate the nuclear
interaction models used to simulate the production of
neutrons from the GCR source and GCR flux varies slowly over
time
• Lunar albedo neutron measurements are not required for the
near-term missions to Gateway and the lunar surface since
the current plan is to keep the mission durations sufficiently
short such that GCRs and any albedo neutron contributions to
crew dose are small compared with the NASA lifetime
radiation exposure limit of 600mSv
Moon
2009 Solar Minimum GCR Environments
Moon - SPE Moon - GCR
Slaba et al., 2011
Slaba et al., 2011
24
25. • GCR shielding strategy
– Break up incident heavy nuclei
– Minimize neutron generation
• SEP shielding strategy
– Stop light ions in shield
– Minimize neutron generation
• Low Z materials are best
– Fewest protons, neutrons in target nuclei
– Pure hydrogen, lithium provide best GCR
shielding of all elements…difficult to engineer
– Practical shielding materials include high
hydrogen content compounds
Regolith Shielding Properties for GCR
Wilson et al., 1998; Adams, 2005
25
26. Mission GCR Radiation Exposures
Mission
Duration
(days)
Dose
(mGy)
Dose equivalent
(mSv)
Effective dose
(mSv)
0 20 40 0 20 40 0 20 40
solar
maximum
Artemis II 10 1.5 2.1 2.5 10.2 6.9 5.9 6.3 5.1 5.3
Artemis III 30 4.6 6.4 7.6 30.5 20.7 17.6 19.0 15.4 15.8
Artemis III (surface) 23.5/6.5 4.2 5.8 6.9 27.7 18.7 16.0 17.4 14.1 14.4
Gateway – 6 month 183 28 39 46 186 126 108 116 94 96
Gateway – 12 month 365 56 78 92 372 252 215 232 188 192
Mars DRM 621/40 99 137 163 644 440 377 405 331 339
Mars DRM 840 128 178 213 855 580 494 533 432 442
solar
minimum
Artemis II 10 4.6 5.2 5.6 28.5 15.0 12.2 14.6 10.9 10.7
Artemis III 30 13.8 15.5 16.7 85.5 44.9 36.5 43.8 32.8 32.1
Artemis III (surface) 23.5/6.5 12.6 14.0 15.0 77.1 40.5 33.0 39.8 29.9 29.2
Gateway – 6 month 183 84 95 102 522 274 223 267 200 196
Gateway – 12 month 365 168 189 203 1040 546 445 533 399 391
Mars DRM 621/40 295 332 356 1795 950 779 929 702 688
Mars DRM 840 386 434 466 2395 1256 1023 1228 918 899
NASA-STD-3001, Rev B., Vol. 1, Section 4.8.2: Career Space Permissible Exposure Limit for Space Flight Radiation
An individual astronaut’s total career effective radiation dose due to space flight radiation exposure
shall be less than 600 mSv. This limit is universal for all ages and sexes.
Shielding:
0, 20, 40 g/cm2
spherical Al shield
GCR environment:
Solar min 2009
Solar max 2001
X/Y duration format:
X days in free space
Y days on surface
Effective dose ≥600 mSv
Valinia et al., 2022
26
27. Plasma Environments
Fraction of Month in Plasma Environments
~73.5% solar wind ~20.6 days
~13.3% magnetosheath ~ 3.7
~13.2% magnetotail ~ 3.7
Bennett et al. [1997]
bow shock
Petrinic and Russell [1993, 1996]
magnetopause
Lunar orbit
~60 Re
27
28. Plasma Regime Identification
Near Earth plasma regimes are
well ordered at low energies
Relatively easy to identify bow
shock and magnetopause, plasma
regimes by plasma characteristics
solar wind magnetosphere solar wind
magnetosheath magnetosheath
He++
H+
Ions
Electrons
Geotail/CPI:
http://www-pi.physics.uiowa.edu/cpi/ 28
29. Magnetosheath and Magnetotail Plasma at Lunar Distances
• Lunar plasma environment includes encounters with magnetotail and magnetosheath once a month (around full Moon)
• High temperature, low density plasma environments in magnetotail
(Univ. of Iowa)
Lunar orbit
Geotail/CPI:
http://www-pi.physics.uiowa.edu/cpi/ 29
30. Lunar Wake
• Moon is a dielectric body that absorbs plasma
flowing onto the surface
• Plasma void with very low density forms in anti-
sunward direction: lunar wake
• High energy electrons can penetrate the wake
establishing ambipolar electric fields that pull ions
into the wake
• Wake eventually fills through complicated plasma
interaction process that is still being studied
Farrell et al., 1998
Ogilvie et al., 1996
Lunar Radii
30
31. Lunar Plasma Environments
• Lunar Prospector Electron Reflectometer
– Spin average electron flux
– ~40 eV (red) to ~20 keV (black)
• April 1998
– Moon in magnetotail exhibits reduced plasma
flux at low energies, little or no impact on
energetic electrons
– Solar energetic particle event
magnetotail
SPE
31
32. Lunar Plasma Environments
• Lunar Prospector Electron Reflectometer
– Spin average electron flux
– ~40 eV (red) to ~20 keV (black)
• 4-5 April 1998
– Moon in solar wind
– Plasma wake electron depletions
32
33. Lunar Plasma Environments
• Lunar Prospector Electron Reflectometer
– Spin average electron flux
– ~40 eV (red) to ~20 keV (black)
• 4-5 April 1998
– Moon in solar wind
– Plasma wake electron depletions
• SPE particles have free access to wake
environments with little modulation
33
35. Charging in Lunar Wake
[Halekas et al. 2005]
• Lunar Prospector 20-115 km
– Wake properties relative to ambient solar
wind
– Spacecraft potentials
day +10 V to +50V
night -100 V to -300 V
Ne
Te
surface
E = q
~ -50 V
geotail, shadow
[Halekas et al., 2002]
B
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
35
36. Lunar Dust Charging
Evidence for charged lunar dust
• Apollo 17 astronaut observations (scattered light)
• Surveyor 5,6,7 images of transient horizon glows (scattered light)
• Clementine images (scattered light)
• Apollo 17 Lunar Ejecta and Meteorite Experiment (temperature anomaly)
Surveyor 7
Sunset view looking west
36
37. Lunar Dust Charging Models
• Stubbs et al., 2005
– Dynamic fountain model
– Current collection dominated by photoelectron currents in
sunlight and plasma currents in darkness
– But secondary electron currents are neglected in the current
model
• Sickafoose et al. 1998 argue SEY for lunar dust are too small to be
significant in the charging process for solar wind plasma electrons with
Te~10’s eV
– Dust exposure to magnetotail plasma in eclipse condition (lunar
darkside) with Te ~ 100’s eV may predict excessive charging when
secondary electron yields are not included in the analysis
SEY
Reference Material e,m Em
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Willis et al., 1973 lunar fines 1.5±0.1 300-700 eV
Horanyi et al. 1998 Apollo 17 soil 3.2 400 eV
JSC-1 3.4 400 eV
MLS-1 3.1 400 eV
[Horyani et al., 1998]
37
38. Extreme Charging in Lunar Environments
~4.5 kV
Magnetotail SPE
• Analysis of Lunar Prospector records suggest lunar surface potentials ~ 4.5 kV
may occur for extreme conditions [Halekas et al., 2007]
• Lower bound to lunar negative surface potential only since spacecraft
potential is unknown
38
39. Extreme Charging in Lunar Environments
• Recent work by Borovsky and Delzanno (2021) suggest that impulsive solar
energetic electron (SEE) events will provide an high energy environment
within the lunar wake that drives strong charging
– SEE events are rich in 100’s keV electrons
– Occur about 20 times a year
• SEY yields for lunar analog materials
– Oxidized aluminum and SiO2 exhibit maximum yields in the 01 – 1 keV
range
– Second crossover (where yields ~ 1) occur at E < 10 keV:
– High flux of 100’s keV rich electron environment will drive strong
charging
• Modeling results suggest lunar surface potentials in the wake can reach
extremely high voltages if the electron exposure is long
Charging Time Negative Potential
(sec) (day) (kilovolt)
--------------------------------------------------------------
10 ~ 1
100 ~ 3
1,000 0.01 ~ 10
10,000 0.12 ~ 30
100,000 1.16 ~ 80
1,000,000 11.6 ~100
10,000,000 116 ~200
--------------------------------------------------------------
Borovsky and Delzanno, 2021
Borovsky and Delzanno, 2021
39
40. Lunar Meteoroid Primary Impactors
• Meteoroids impact the lunar surface, range in velocity from 10’s km/s
to over 70 km/s
• No atmosphere to reduce the meteoroid energy and flux
• Impact risk is primarily for long term exploration infrastructure
including development of lunar habitats, power systems, and other
hardware on the surface for extended periods of time
• Regular monitoring of lunar meteoroid impacts by NASA MSFC over a
period from 2005 to 2020 yielded over 400 candidate lunar impacts,
demonstrating the Moon is subject to regular bombardment by
meteoroids with masses in the 10’s g range
https://www.nasa.gov/centers/marshall/news/lunar/lunar_impacts.html
Sampling bias
T S
NASA/Meteor Environment Office
1/30 sec/frame
2 May 2006
40
41. Lunar Ejecta (Secondary Meteoroids)
• Lunar meteoroid ejecta particles are potential threats to
spacecraft and crew operating on or above the lunar surface.
• The secondary meteoroid ejecta environment is generated when
primary meteoroids impact the lunar surface, generate a crater,
and eject pieces of regolith.
• Impact risk is relatively low for direct primary meteor impact on
vehicles, structures, or crew.
• Impact risk from secondary ejecta particles is greater due to the
large number of ejecta particles generated during a single impact.
• Meteoroid impacts generating craters and ejecta is an ongoing
process in the lunar environment.
• NASA is currently using Apollo-era estimates of lunar secondary
ejecta while a revision is in development [DeStefano, 2021; Minow
et al., 2022]
New 12-m-diameter crater with extended ejecta blanket formed
between 25 October 2012 and 21 April 2013 discovered by
comparing new and old images from the Lunar Reconnaissance
Orbiter (LRO) Narrow Angle Camera (NAC). [NASA/GSFC/Arizona
State University]
Crater
Area ~ 102 m2
Ejecta
Area > 106 m2
41
42. Lunar Ejecta (Secondary Meteoroids)
• Speyerer et al. 2016 report 222 new lunar craters obtained by comparing 14,092 Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Narrow Angle
Camera before/after image pairs, images covers a period of ~6 years
• New crater diameters range from 10 m to 43 m, time gaps between before and after images range from 176 to 1,241 Earth days,
and images represent 6.6% of the lunar surface
• Yellow dots mark new craters, red dots mark new craters where the impacts were also observed by Earth-based video monitoring
• New craters are appearing 33% more often than predicted by current models
[Speyerer et al., 2016, NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University] 42
43. NASA Lunar Design Environments
• NASA’s SLS-SPEC-159, Cross-Program Design Specification for
Natural Environments (DSNE) document contains environment
specifications for NASA Exploration Systems Development (ESD)
programs including the Artemis lunar programs
• Developed and maintained by the NASA Marshall Space Flight
Center’s EV44/Natural Environments Branch
• DSNE contains environment specifications for all relevant
environments encountered during a lunar mission:
– 3.1 Prelaunch – Ground Processing Phases
– 3.2 Launch Countdown and Earth Ascent Phases
– 3.3 In-Space Phases
– 3.4 Lunar Surface Operational Phases
– 3.5 Entry and Landing Phases
– 3.6 Contingency and Off-Nominal Landing Phases
– 3.7 Recovery and Post-Flight Processing Phases
• Document is available for use in planning lunar missions:
– DSNE approved for public release, distribution is unlimited
– Current version: SLS-SPEC-159, Revision I
– URL: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20210024522
43
44. NASA Lunar Design Environments
• NASA’s SLS-SPEC-159, Cross-Program Design Specification for
Natural Environments (DSNE) document contains environment
specifications for NASA Exploration Systems Development (ESD)
programs including the Artemis lunar programs
• Developed and maintained by the NASA Marshall Space Flight
Center’s EV44/Natural Environments Branch
• DSNE contains environment specifications for all relevant
environments encountered during a lunar mission:
– 3.1 Prelaunch – Ground Processing Phases
– 3.2 Launch Countdown and Earth Ascent Phases
– 3.3 In-Space Phases
– 3.4 Lunar Surface Operational Phases
– 3.5 Entry and Landing Phases
– 3.6 Contingency and Off-Nominal Landing Phases
– 3.7 Recovery and Post-Flight Processing Phases
• Document is available for use in planning lunar missions:
– DSNE approved for public release, distribution is unlimited
– Current version: SLS-SPEC-159, Revision I
– URL: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20210024522
3.3 In-Space Phases .............................................................................. 84
3.3.1 Total Dose ............................................................................... 85
3.3.2 Single Event Effects ............................................................... 152
3.3.3 Plasma Charging .................................................................... 180
3.3.4 Ionizing Radiation Environment for Crew Exposure ............ 190
3.3.5 Reserved ................................................................................. 196
3.3.6 Meteoroid and Orbital Debris Environment .......................... 196
3.3.7 Earth Gravitational Field ....................................................... 198
3.3.8 Lunar Gravitational Field ...................................................... 198
3.3.9 Thermal Environment for In-Space Hardware ...................... 200
3.3.10 Solar Illumination Environment for In-Space Hardware .... 209
3.3.11 In-Space Neutral Atmosphere (Thermosphere) Density ..... 211
3.3.12 Geomagnetic Fields (Reserved) .......................................... 212
44
45. NASA Lunar Design Environments
• NASA’s SLS-SPEC-159, Cross-Program Design Specification for
Natural Environments (DSNE) document contains environment
specifications for NASA Exploration Systems Development (ESD)
programs including the Artemis lunar programs
• Developed and maintained by the NASA Marshall Space Flight
Center’s EV44/Natural Environments Branch
• DSNE contains environment specifications for all relevant
environments encountered during a lunar mission:
– 3.1 Prelaunch – Ground Processing Phases
– 3.2 Launch Countdown and Earth Ascent Phases
– 3.3 In-Space Phases
– 3.4 Lunar Surface Operational Phases
– 3.5 Entry and Landing Phases
– 3.6 Contingency and Off-Nominal Landing Phases
– 3.7 Recovery and Post-Flight Processing Phases
• Document is available for use in planning lunar missions:
– DSNE approved for public release, distribution is unlimited
– Current version: SLS-SPEC-159, Revision I
– URL: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20210024522
3.3 In-Space Phases .............................................................................. 84
3.3.1 Total Dose ............................................................................... 85
3.3.2 Single Event Effects ............................................................... 152
3.3.3 Plasma Charging .................................................................... 180
3.3.4 Ionizing Radiation Environment for Crew Exposure ............ 190
3.3.5 Reserved ................................................................................. 196
3.3.6 Meteoroid and Orbital Debris Environment .......................... 196
3.3.7 Earth Gravitational Field ....................................................... 198
3.3.8 Lunar Gravitational Field ...................................................... 198
3.3.9 Thermal Environment for In-Space Hardware ...................... 200
3.3.10 Solar Illumination Environment for In-Space Hardware .... 209
3.3.11 In-Space Neutral Atmosphere (Thermosphere) Density ..... 211
3.3.12 Geomagnetic Fields (Reserved) .......................................... 212
3.4 Lunar Surface Operational Phases ......................................................212
3.4.1 Lunar Surface Geological and Geomorphological Environment 213
3.4.2 Lunar Regolith Properties .......................................................... 224
3.4.3 Lunar Surface Plasma Environment .......................................... 260
3.4.4 Lunar Regolith Electrical Properties .......................................... 265
3.4.5 Optical Properties ....................................................................... 273
3.4.6 Lunar Thermal Environment ...................................................... 274
3.4.7 Lunar Ionizing Radiation Environment ...................................... 286
3.4.8 Lunar Meteoroid and Ejecta Environment ................................. 289
3.4.9 Lunar Illumination ..................................................................... 290
3.4.10 Lunar Neutral Atmosphere ............................................ .......... 292
3.4.11 Special Physical and Chemical Conditions of Regolith
Inside Areas of Permanent Shadow(RESERVED) ............ 292
45