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Testing the ability of the ExoMars 2018 payload to document geological context and potential habitability on Mars

TitoloTesting the ability of the ExoMars 2018 payload to document geological context and potential habitability on Mars
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2015
AutoriBost, N., Ramboz C., LeBreton N., Foucher F., Lopez-Reyes G., De Angelis S., Josset M., Venegas G., Sanz-Arranz A., Rull F., Medina J., Josset J.-L., Souchon A., Ammannito E., De Sanctis M.C., Di Iorio Tatiana, Carli C., Vago J.L., and Westall F.
RivistaPlanetary and Space Science
Volume108
Paginazione87-97
ISSN00320633
Parole chiaveAbility testing, Aerial photography, Background information, ExoMars, Geology, Information concerning, ISAR, Mars, Ma_Miss and RLS, MicrOmega, Payload instruments, Petrographic studies, Photography, Rocks, Spectrometers, VNIR and Raman Spectroscopy
Abstract

Abstract The future ExoMars rover mission (ESA/Roscosmos), to be launched in 2018, will investigate the habitability of the Martian surface and near subsurface, and search for traces of past life in the form of textural biosignatures and organic molecules. In support of this mission, a selection of relevant Mars analogue materials has been characterised and stored in the International Space Analogue Rockstore (ISAR), hosted in Orléans, France. Two ISAR samples were analysed by prototypes of the ExoMars rover instruments used for petrographic study. The objective was to determine whether a full interpretation of the rocks could be achieved on the basis of the data obtained by the ExoMars visible-IR imager and spectrometer (MicrOmega), the close-up imager (CLUPI), the drill infrared spectrometer (Ma-Miss) and the Raman spectrometer (RLS), first separately then in their entirety. In order to not influence the initial instrumental interpretation, the samples were sent to the different teams without any additional information. This first step was called the "Blind Test" phase. The data obtained by the instruments were then complemented with photography of the relevant outcrops (as would be available during the ExoMars mission) before being presented to two geologists tasked with the interpretation. The context data and photography of the outcrops and of the samples were sufficient for the geologists to identify the rocks. This initial identification was crucial for the subsequent, iterative interpretation of the spectroscopic data. The data from the different spectrometers was, thus, cross-calibrated against the photographic interpretations and against each other. In this way, important mineralogical details, such as evidence of aqueous alteration of the rocks, provided relevant information concerning potential habitable conditions. The final conclusion from this test is that, when processed together, the ExoMars payload instruments produce complementary data allowing reliable interpretation of the geological context and potential for habitable environments. This background information is fundamental for the analysis and interpretation of organics in the processed Martian rocks. © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84926409811&doi=10.1016%2fj.pss.2015.01.006&partnerID=40&md5=308539db60cc9537498bb8c4ce8c38cf
DOI10.1016/j.pss.2015.01.006
Citation KeyBost201587