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The Ganymede laser altimeter (GALA): key objectives, instrument design, and performance

Authors :
German Centre for Air and Space Travel
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
European Commission
Hussmann, Hauke
Lingenauber, Kay
Kallenbach, Reinald
Enya, Keigo
Thomas, Nicolas
Lara, Luisa María
Althaus, Christian L.
Araki, Hiroshi
Behnke, Thomas
Castro Marín, J. M.
Eisenmenger, Henri
Gerber, Thomas
Herranz, Miguel
Hüttig, Christian
Ishibashi, Ko
Jiménez Ortega, Jaime
Kimura, Jun
Kobayashi, Masanori
Lötzke, Horst-Georg
Lichopoj, Alexander
Lüdicke, Fabian
Martínez-Navajas, Ignacio
Michaelis, Harald
Namiki, Noriyuki
Noda, Hirotomo
Oberst, Jürgen
Oshigami, Shoko
Rodríguez García, Juan Pablo
Rodrigo, Julio
Rösner, Kerstin
Stark, Alexander
Steinbrügge, Gregor
Thabaut, Pascal
del Togno, Simone
Touhara, Kazuyuki
Villamil, Sebastian
Wendler, Belinda
Wickhusen, Kai
Willner, Konrad
German Centre for Air and Space Travel
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
European Commission
Hussmann, Hauke
Lingenauber, Kay
Kallenbach, Reinald
Enya, Keigo
Thomas, Nicolas
Lara, Luisa María
Althaus, Christian L.
Araki, Hiroshi
Behnke, Thomas
Castro Marín, J. M.
Eisenmenger, Henri
Gerber, Thomas
Herranz, Miguel
Hüttig, Christian
Ishibashi, Ko
Jiménez Ortega, Jaime
Kimura, Jun
Kobayashi, Masanori
Lötzke, Horst-Georg
Lichopoj, Alexander
Lüdicke, Fabian
Martínez-Navajas, Ignacio
Michaelis, Harald
Namiki, Noriyuki
Noda, Hirotomo
Oberst, Jürgen
Oshigami, Shoko
Rodríguez García, Juan Pablo
Rodrigo, Julio
Rösner, Kerstin
Stark, Alexander
Steinbrügge, Gregor
Thabaut, Pascal
del Togno, Simone
Touhara, Kazuyuki
Villamil, Sebastian
Wendler, Belinda
Wickhusen, Kai
Willner, Konrad
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The Ganymede Laser Altimeter (GALA) is one of the ten scientific instruments selected for the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) mission currently implemented under responsibility of the European Space Agency (ESA). JUICE is scheduled for launch in mid 2022; arrival at Jupiter will be by end of 2029 with the nominal science mission—including close flybys at Ganymede, Europa, and Callisto and a Ganymede orbit phase—ending by mid 2033. GALA’s main objective is to obtain topographic data of the icy satellites of Jupiter: Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. By measuring the diurnal tidal deformation of Ganymede, which crucially depends on the decoupling of the surface ice layer from the deep interior by a liquid water ocean, GALA will obtain evidence for (or against) a subsurface ocean in a 500 km orbit around the satellite and will provide constraints on Ganymede’s ice shell thickness. In combination with other instruments, it will characterize the morphology of surface units on Ganymede, Europa, and Callisto providing not only topography but also surface roughness and albedo (at 1064 nm) measurements. GALA is a single-beam laser altimeter operating with up to 50 Hz (nominal 30 Hz) shot frequency at a wavelength of 1064 nm and pulse lengths of 5.5 ± 2.5 ns using a Nd:YAG laser. The return pulse is detected by an Avalanche Photo Diode (APD) with 100 MHz bandwidth and is digitized at a sampling rate of 200 MHz providing range measurements with a subsample resolution of 0.1 m and surface roughness measurements from pulse-shape analysis on the scale of the footprint size of about 50 m at 500 km altitude. The instrument is developed in collaboration of institutes and industry from Germany, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain. © 2019, CEAS.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1257734174
Document Type :
Electronic Resource