LRO/LAMP observations of the lunar helium exosphere: constraints on thermal accommodation and outgassing rate

ABSTRACT We report a comprehensive study by the UV spectrograph LAMP (Lyman-Alpha Mapping Project) onboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter to map the spatial distribution and temporal evolution of helium atoms in the lunar exosphere, via spectroscopy of the He i emission line at 58.4 nm. Comparison...

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Published in:Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Vol. 501; no. 3; pp. 4438 - 4451
Main Authors: Grava, Cesare, Hurley, Dana M, Feldman, Paul D, Retherford, Kurt D, Greathouse, Thomas K, Pryor, Wayne R, Gladstone, G Randall, Halekas, Jasper S, Mandt, Kathleen E, Wyrick, Danielle Y, Davis, Michael W, Egan, Anthony F, Kaufmann, David E, Versteeg, Maarten H, Stern, S Alan
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 01-03-2021
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Summary:ABSTRACT We report a comprehensive study by the UV spectrograph LAMP (Lyman-Alpha Mapping Project) onboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter to map the spatial distribution and temporal evolution of helium atoms in the lunar exosphere, via spectroscopy of the He i emission line at 58.4 nm. Comparisons with several Monte Carlo models show that lunar exospheric helium is fully thermalized with the surface (accommodation coefficient of 1.0). LAMP-derived helium source rates are compared to the flux of solar wind alpha particles measured in situ by the ARTEMIS twin spacecraft. Our observations confirm that these alpha particles (He++) are the main source of lunar exospheric helium, representing 79 per cent of the total source rate, with the remaining 21 per cent presumed to be outgassing from the lunar interior. The endogenic source rate we derive, (1.49 ± 0.08) ×  106 cm−2 s−1, is consistent with previous measurements but is now better constrained. LAMP-constrained exospheric surface densities present a dawn/dusk ratio of ∼1.8, within the value measured by the Apollo 17 surface mass spectrometer LACE (Lunar Atmosphere Composition Experiment). Finally, observations of lunar helium during three Earth’s magnetotail crossings, when the Moon is shielded from the solar wind, confirm previous observations of an exponential decay of helium with a time constant of 4.5 d
ISSN:0035-8711
1365-2966
DOI:10.1093/mnras/staa3884