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The Scientific Importance of Returning Airfall Dust as a Part of Mars Sample Return (MSR)

Authors :
Monica M. Grady
Roger E. Summons
Timothy D. Swindle
Frances Westall
Gerhard Kminek
Michael A. Meyer
David W. Beaty
Brandi L. Carrier
Timothy Haltigin
Lindsay E. Hays
Carl B. Agee
Henner Busemann
Barbara Cavalazzi
Charles S. Cockell
Vinciane Debaille
Daniel P. Glavin
Ernst Hauber
Aurore Hutzler
Bernard Marty
Francis M. McCubbin
Lisa M. Pratt
Aaron B. Regberg
Alvin L. Smith
Caroline L. Smith
Kimberly T. Tait
Nicholas J. Tosca
Arya Udry
Tomohiro Usui
Michael A. Velbel
Meenakshi Wadhwa
Maria-Paz Zorzano
Source :
Astrobiology. 22(S1)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2022.

Abstract

Dust transported in the martian atmosphere is of intrinsic scientific interest and has relevance for the planning of human missions in the future. The MSR Campaign, as currently designed, presents an important opportunity to return serendipitous, airfall dust. The tubes containing samples collected by the Perseverance rover would be placed in cache depots on the martian surface perhaps as early as 2023–24 for recovery by a subsequent mission no earlier than 2028–29, and possibly as late as 2030–31. Thus, the sample tube surfaces could passively collect dust for multiple years. This dust is deemed to be exceptionally valuable as it would inform our knowledge and understanding of Mars' global mineralogy, surface processes, surface-atmosphere interactions, and atmospheric circulation. Preliminary calculations suggest that the total mass of such dust on a full set of tubes could be as much as 100 mg and, therefore, sufficient for many types of laboratory analyses. Two planning steps would optimize our ability to take advantage of this opportunity: (1) the dust-covered sample tubes should be loaded into the Orbiting Sample container (OS) with minimal cleaning and (2) the capability to recover this dust early in the workflow within an MSR Sample Receiving Facility (SRF) would need to be established. A further opportunity to advance dust/atmospheric science using MSR, depending upon the design of the MSR Campaign elements, may lie with direct sampling and the return of airborne dust.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15578070 and 15311074
Volume :
22
Issue :
S1
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Astrobiology
Notes :
829688.01.03.03, , 80NM0018D0004, , NNN12AA01C, , NNJ14ZKA001N, , PID2019-104205GB-C21, , MDM-2017-0737
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20220013365
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/AST.2021.0111