Transcript Document

Radio Science Experiments
on the Lunar Surface
Jan Bergman & Lennart Åhlén
The “NEXT” Lunar Radio Explorer
Workshop
ESTEC, Noordwijk, December 7, 2007
Physics in Space
Outline
Radio science objectives
 Lunar radio and plasma science
 Radio orbital angular momentum
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Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Physics in Space
Radio Science Objectives
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Gain knowledge of the lunar EM environment
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Radio measurements are versatile
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Necessary before larger radio observatories from the
Moon can be realised
Study the Moon itself
Use the Moon as a shield
Use the Moon as a target
Should attract many scientists well beyond the
radio astronomy community!
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Physics in Space
Radio Noise Environment
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Sun and the solar wind
Planetary radio
emissions, AKR
Man-made sources
Galactic noise
More exotic
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Askaryan radio pulses
Dust and meteorites
Magnetotelluric waves?
“One man’s signal is
another man’s noise”
Typical man-made interference received by the WAVES
instrument on board WIND, averaged over 24 hours.
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Physics in Space
Radio silent Moon
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Most radio
quiet site
within reach
in our solar
system
Lunar LF radio
observatory
A dream
for many
decades
The only low
frequency
radio map of
the universe
was made by
RAE-2 using a
single dipole
Lunar occultation of Earth observed by the RAE-2 satellite, 1973. The top frame
is a computer generated spectrogram; the other plots display intensity vs. time
variations at frequencies where terrestrial noise levels are often observed
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Physics in Space
RAE-2 all sky image at 2 MHz
RAE-2 all sky image at ~2 MHz. From J. C. Novaco and L. W. Brown. Nonthermal
galactic emission below 10 MHz. Astrophysical Journal, 221:114-123, April 1978
A relatively simple but modern digital radio
receiver on the lunar surface could do wonders!
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Physics in Space
Pristine Moon
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Investigate the pristine lunar environment
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Lunar exosphere and plasma
Lunar landers expel large amounts of gas and
dust (at speeds up to 2 km/s!)
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Mechanical wear – Moon dust sandblasting
Contaminates the lunar environment
 Apollo’s neutral mass spectrometers severely hampered.
The effect lasted several months after the mission.
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How will this affect lunar radio science?
Do the necessary recordings quickly!
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Before frequent landings make such studies futile
And then, keep track of the lunar “climate” changes
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Lunar ionosphere
Physics in Space
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Photoelectron layer near
surface on the day side
Apollo ALSEP observed
plasma densities reaching
10000 cm-3 extending
several 100 meters
The Luna and Apollo
measurements are the only
attempts so far to diagnose
the near-surface plasma
The plasma frequency:
fp  9 n
kHz (for n in cm-3)
~400 kHz
Dual frequency radar measurements from the Luna 22
spacecraft give (reasonably good) evidence that an
ionised layer builds up on the illuminated side of the Moon
(Vyshlov, 1976)
ALSEP – Apollo Lunar Surface Exploration Package
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Physics in Space
Lunar wake plasma dynamics
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Only modern (1996) lunar wake plasma
measurements by WIND at 6.5 RM
WIND revealed a lunar wake density
cavity
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Cross wake current has to close
somewhere near the Moon!
Carried by conductive photoelectron
layer near the dayside lunar surface?
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Electron density: 0.01 cm-3
Temperature: ~100 eV
Plasma emissions in the wake
Crossed ion wake flow
No progress expected unless new
measurements are made
A lander and an orbiter equipped with
magnetometers and radio antennas
(thermal noise receiver) could do the job!
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Physics in Space
Interactions with the geotail
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Moon plasma effects on the geomagnetic tail
and on near Earth magnetospheric
processes are unknown
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If a well developed lunar ionosphere exists,
magnetospheric effects should be significant
Would act both as a mass load and a
diversion of electrical currents in the geotail
If true, mass loading of the geotail could lead
to large magnetospheric disturbances, even
causing auroral storms
Magnetospheric boundary as seen from
the Moon in soft X-rays. Artist’s
conception. LRX/NASA/Rob Kilgore
The Moon, at 60 RE, is well within the Earth’s
magnetosphere, which extends out to ~250 RE
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Ultrahigh energy cosmic rays
Physics in Space
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Cosmic rays interact with CMB
photons above 1020 eV
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Still, there seems to exist particles
beyond the GZK limit!
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No GZK neutrinos observed
UHECR at E > 1020 eV might
already be neutrinos! UHECν
UHECν flux is very low
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Their origin is unknown
GZK cut-off should produce
neutrinos
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Intergalactic medium no longer
transparent – the GZK limit
Probably ~1 particle/km2 and year
Huge detector volumes required
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
The so called GZK limit on cosmic rays. A handful
of super GZK events have been observed, shown
here in red. From AGASA.
Radio detection of UHECν
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Primary produces a charged particle shower
Physics in Space
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In radio, the emission becomes coherent
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“... use of ice, permafrost, very dry rock etc.”
“Very dry rock” is plentiful in upper layers of the Moon
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Output power scales quadratically with primary energy
Askaryan 1962:
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Yields incoherent Cherenkov emissions at optical wavelengths
Output power scales only linearly with primary energy
For E > 1016 eV the Moon becomes opaque to neutrinos
Detection by antennas on the surface or from an orbiter
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How to separate UHECν and other UHECR?
O. Stål, J. E. S. Bergman, B. Thidé, L. K. S. Daldorff, and G. Ingelman. Prospects for lunar satellite detection of radio
pulses from ultrahigh energy neutrinos interacting with the Moon. Phys. Rev. Lett., 98(7):071103, 16 February 2007.
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Physics in Space
Micrometeorites and dust
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Micrometeorites hitting the Moon or dust
hitting antennas also produce radio pulses
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Cassini ring crossing, June 30, 2004
 Over 100000 dust hits detected in less than 5 minutes
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Distinguished from neutrino induced pulses
because of their much longer pulse duration
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µs rather than 10’s of ns
A lunar radio receiver should be fast enough
and have transient detection capabilities!
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Physics in Space
Detection of radio orbital
angular momentum
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L  r  E  B  Er  B  Br  E
L is conserved
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Could radio OAM be detected from
a point measurement of E and B?
Large, AU wide, stationary beams
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Radial O(1/r2) fields carry
information about the source
rotation to infinity
Simple to generate using a small
phased array [PRL, 24 Aug. 2007]
Measure during one year
Pulsars or other transient signals
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Measure the beam profile as it
sweeps by the receiver
Synthesized radio La Guerre-Gauss (LG) beams
using a circular array of ten tripoles. Upper panel
shows an l=1 and lower panel shows an l=3 beam.
Physics in Space Programme, IRF, Uppsala, Sweden | www.phisp.irfu.se
Thank’s for your attention!
Jan Bergman & Lennart Åhlén
[email protected]
[email protected]