The preparation of planetary missions as well as the analysis of their data require a wide use of planetary simulants. They are very important for both testing mission operations and payloads, and for interpreting remote sensing data. In this work, a detailed analysis of three commercially available simulants of Martian dust and regolith is presented. Indeed, up to date, a complete data set related to their chemical, mineralogical, granulometric and spectral characters is not fully provided by their distribution and sales companies. Our dataset regards the Mars Global (MGS-1) High-Fidelity Martian Dirt Simulant [1], the Mojave Mars Simulant MMS-1 [2] and the Enhanced Mars Simulant (MMS-2) [2]. Being essential for ensuring consistency and enabling data comparison, all the chosen Martian simulants underwent the same analytical process. Grainsize data were collected using a Laser Diffraction Particle Size Analyzer. Chemical analysis was performed by Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectroscopy (ICP-MS). Mineralogical analysis was carried out by X-Ray powder Diffractometry (XRD). Moreover, the largest particles of MGS-1 simulant were analyzed with the Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM-EDS) in order to confirm their chemical composition. Finally, the spectral acquisitions in the VNIR-SWIR range were taken by two Headwall Photonics hyperspectral imaging cameras. This complete series of data integrating pre-existing ones (e.g., Cannon et al. [1] and Karl et al. [2]) can in the future be used to allow a straightful choice of the right simulant for biological and life-support experiments and potential testing of mission instruments, to help inferring the composition of the Martian surface from remote sensing data, and to create new simulants or adjust the existing ones in order to get closer to the known Martian regolith variability and eventually new compositional information provided by future missions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2024.111099 | DOI Listing |
An Acad Bras Cienc
December 2024
Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Departamento de Biofísica e Biometria, Núcleo de Genética Molecular Ambiental e Astrobiologia, Rua São Francisco Xavier, 524, Pavilhão Reitor Haroldo Lisboa da Cunha, Subsolo, Maracanã, 20550-013 Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
Extremophile organisms have been largely studied in Astrobiology. Among them, two antarctic plants emerge as good candidates to become colonizers of other celestial bodies, such as Mars and the Moon. The present research aimed to evaluate survival and growing capacity of Sanionia uncinata and Colobanthus quitensis on Martian (MGS-1) and Lunar (LMS-1) regolith simulants, under terrestrial conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData Brief
December 2024
Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova, Via Gradenigo 6, 35131 Padova, (PD), Italy.
The preparation of planetary missions as well as the analysis of their data require a wide use of planetary simulants. They are very important for both testing mission operations and payloads, and for interpreting remote sensing data. In this work, a detailed analysis of three commercially available simulants of Martian dust and regolith is presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
August 2024
HUN-REN Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Institute of Materials and Environmental Chemistry, Magyar Tudósok Krt. 2, H-1117 Budapest, Hungary.
For space missions to either the Moon or Mars, protecting mechanical moving parts from the abrasive effects of prevailing surface dust is crucial. This paper compares the abrasive effects of two lunar and two Martian simulant regoliths using special pin-on-disc tests on a stainless steel/polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) sealing material pair. Due to the regolith particles entering the contact zone, a three-body abrasion mechanism took place.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFiScience
August 2024
Laboratory of Environmental Science and Technology, The Xinjiang Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry, Key Laboratory of Functional Materials and Devices for Special Environments, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi 830011, China.
Many countries and commercial organizations have shown great interest in constructing a Martian base. resource utilization (ISRU) provides a cost-effective way to achieve this ambitious goal. In this article, we proposed to use Martian soil simulant to produce a fiber to satisfy material requirement for the construction of Martian base.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAstrobiology
July 2024
Life Sciences Department, Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom.
The key building blocks for life on Mars could be preserved within potentially habitable paleo-depositional settings with their detection possible by utilizing mid-infrared spectroscopy; however, a definite identification and confirmation of organic or even biological origin will require the samples to be returned to Earth. In the present study, Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopic techniques were used to characterize both mineralogical and organic materials within Mars dust simulant JSC Mars-1 and ancient Antarctic cyanobacterial microbial mats from 1901 to 1904 Discovery Expedition. When FTIR spectroscopy is applied to cyanobacterial microbial mat communities, the resulting spectra will reflect the average biochemical composition of the mats rather than taxa-specific spectral patterns of the individual organisms and can thus be considered as a total chemical analysis of the mat colony.
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