Molecular Composition Analysis of Distant Targets
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Molecular Composition Analysis of Distant TargetsHTML
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Molecular Composition Analysis of Distant TargetsHTML
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Molecular Composition Analysis of Distant TargetsHTML
Techport Project XML Metadata
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Molecular Composition Analysis of Distant TargetsHTML
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| accessLevel | public |
| bureauCode | {026:00} |
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| identifier | TECHPORT_88498 |
| issued | 2017-06-01 |
| landingPage | https://techport.nasa.gov/view/88498 |
| modified | 2020-01-29 |
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| publisher | Space Technology Mission Directorate |
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| maintainer | TECHPORT SUPPORT |
| maintainer_email | hq-techport@mail.nasa.gov |
| metadata_created | 2025-11-20T20:06:30.316890 |
| metadata_modified | 2025-11-20T20:06:30.316894 |
| notes | We propose a system capable of probing the molecular composition of cold solar system targets such as asteroids, comets, planets and moons from a distant vantage. Our concept utilizes a directed energy beam to vaporize or sublimate a spot on a distant target, such as from a spacecraft near the object. With sufficient flux, our published results indicate that the spot temperature rises rapidly, and evaporation of materials on the target surface occurs (Hughes et al., 2015; Lubin and Hughes, 2015; Lubin et al., 2014). The melted spot serves as a high-temperature blackbody source, and ejected material creates a molecular plume in front of the spot. Molecular and atomic absorption of the blackbody radiation occurs within the ejected plume. Bulk composition of the surface material is investigated by using a spectrometer to view the heated spot through the ejected material. We envision a spacecraft that could be sent to probe the composition of a target asteroid, comet or other planetary body while orbiting the targeted object. The spacecraft would be equipped with an array of lasers and a spectrometer, powered by photovoltaics. Spatial composition maps could be created by scanning the directed energy beam across the surface. Applying the laser beam to a single spot continuously produces a borehole, and shallow sub-surface composition profiling is also possible. Our initial simulations of laser heating, plume opacity, material absorption profiles and spectral detectivity show promise for molecular composition analysis. Such a system has compelling potential benefit for solar system exploration by establishing the capability to directly interrogate the bulk composition of objects from a distant vantage. We propose to develop models, execute preliminary feasibility analysis, and specify a spacecraft system architecture for a hypothetical mission that seeks to perform surface molecular composition analysis and mapping of a near-earth asteroid (NEA) while the craft orbits the asteroid. |
| num_resources | 4 |
| num_tags | 10 |
| title | Molecular Composition Analysis of Distant Targets |