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The case for a multi-channel polarization sensitive LIDAR for investigation of insolation-driven ices and atmospheres

Authors :
Adrian Jon Brown
Gorden Videen
Evgenij Zubko
Nicholas Heavens
Nicole Jeanne Schlegel
Patricio Becerra
Young-Jun Choi
Colin R. Meyer
Tanya N. Harrison
Paul Hayne
Rachel Wyndham Obbard
Tim Michaels
Michael J Wolff
Scott D Guzewich
Yongxiang Hu
Claire Newman
Chae Kyung Sim
Peter Benjamin Buhler
Margaret E Landis
Timothy John Stubbs
Aymeric Spiga
Devanshu Jha
Source :
Planetary Science and Astrobiology Decadal Survey 2023-2032.
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2020.

Abstract

All LIDAR instruments are not the same, and advancement of LIDAR technology requires an ongoing interest and demand from the community to foster further development of the required components. The purpose of this white paper is to make the decadal survey panel aware of the need for further technical development, and the potential payoff of investing experimental time, money and thought into the next generation of LIDARs. Technologies for development:​ We advocate for future development of LIDAR technologies to measure the ​polarization​ state of the reflected light at ​selected multiple wavelengths,​ chosen according to the species of interest (e.g., H​2​O and CO​2​ in the Martian setting).Key scientific questions: ​In the coming decade, dollars spent on these LIDAR technologies will go towards addressing key climate questions on Mars and other rocky bodies, particularly those with seasonally changing (i.e. insolation driven) plumes of multiple icy volatiles such as Mars, Enceladus, Triton, or Pluto, and insolation-driven dust lifting, such as cometary bodies and the Moon. We will show from examining past Martian and terrestrial lidars that orbital and landed LIDARs can be effective for producing new insights into insolation-driven processes in current planetary climate on several bodies, beyond that available to our current fleet of largely passive instruments on planetary missions

Subjects

Subjects :
Lasers And Masers

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Planetary Science and Astrobiology Decadal Survey 2023-2032
Notes :
432938.11.01.04.07.01.08
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20205005981
Document Type :
Report