The Lucy Thermal Emission Spectrometer (L’TES) Instrument

P. R. Christensen, V. E. Hamilton, G. L. Mehall, S. Anwar, H. Bowles, S. Chase, Z. Farkas, T. Fisher, A. Holmes, I. Kubik, I. Lazbin, W. O’Donnell, C. Ortiz, D. Pelham, S. Rogers, K. Shamordola, T. Tourville, R. Woodward

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

The Lucy Thermal Emission Spectrometer (L’TES) will provide remote measurements of the thermophysical properties of the Trojan asteroids studied by the Lucy mission. L’TES is build-to-print hardware copy of the OTES instrument flown on OSIRIS-REx. It is a Fourier Transform spectrometer covering the spectral range 5.71–100 μm (1750–100 cm−1) with spectral sampling intervals of 8.64, 17.3, and 34.6 cm−1 and a 7.3-mrad field of view. The L’TES telescope is a 15.2-cm diameter Cassegrain telescope that feeds a flat-plate Michelson moving mirror mounted on a linear voice-coil motor assembly to a single uncooled deuterated l-alanine doped triglycine sulfate (DLATGS) pyroelectric detector. A significant firmware change from OTES is the ability to acquire interferograms of different length and spectral resolution with acquisition times of 0.5, 1, and 2 seconds. A single ∼0.851 μm laser diode is used in a metrology interferometer to provide precise moving mirror control and IR sampling at 772 Hz. The beamsplitter is a 38-mm diameter, 1-mm thick chemical vapor deposited diamond with an antireflection microstructure to minimize surface reflection. An internal calibration cone blackbody target, together with observations of space, provides radiometric calibration. The radiometric precision in a single spectrum is ≤2.2 × 10−8 W cm−2 sr−1 /cm−1 between 300 and 1350 cm−1. The absolute temperature error is <2 K for scene temperatures >75 K. The overall L’TES envelope size is 37.6 × 29.0 × 30.4 cm, and the mass is 6.47 kg. The power consumption is 12.6 W average. L’TES was developed by Arizona State University with AZ Space Technologies developing the electronics. L’TES was integrated, tested, and radiometrically calibrated on the Arizona State University campus in Tempe, AZ. Initial data from space have verified the instrument’s radiometric and spatial performance.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number1
JournalSpace Science Reviews
Volume220
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2024

Keywords

  • Asteroid
  • Lucy
  • Thermal emission spectrometer
  • Trojan

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Space and Planetary Science

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