Jian-Qing Feng
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jian-Qing Feng.
Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
Yan Su; Guangyou Fang; Jian-Qing Feng; Shuguo Xing; Yicai Ji; Bin Zhou; Yunze Gao; Han Li; Shun Dai; Yuan Xiao; Chunlai Li
To improve our understanding of the formation and evolution of the Moon, one of the payloads onboard the Chang’e-3 (CE-3) rover is Lunar Penetrating Radar (LPR). This investigation is the first attempt to explore the lunar subsurface structure by using ground penetrating radar with high resolution. We have probed the subsurface to a depth of several hundred meters using LPR. In-orbit testing, data processing and the preliminary results are presented. These observations have revealed the configuration of regolith where the thickness of regolith varies from about 4 m to 6 m. In addition, one layer of lunar rock, which is about 330 m deep and might have been accumulated during the depositional hiatus of mare basalts, was detected.
Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
Hongbo Zhang; Lei Zheng; Yan Su; Guangyou Fang; Bin Zhou; Jian-Qing Feng; Shuguo Xing; Shun Dai; JunDuo Li; Yicai Ji; Yunze Gao; Yuan Xiao; Chunlai Li
Lunar Penetrating Radar (LPR) onboard the rover that is part of the Chang’e-3 (CE-3) mission was firstly utilized to obtain in situ measurements about geological structure on the lunar surface and the thickness of the lunar regolith, which are key elements for studying the evolutional history of lunar crust. Because penetration depth and resolution of LPR are related to the scientific objectives of this mission, a series of ground-based experiments using LPR was carried out, and results of the experimental data were obtained in a glacial area located in the northwest region of China. The results show that the penetration depth of the first channel antenna used for LPR is over 79 m with a resolution of 2.8 m, and that for the second channel antenna is over 50.8 m with a resolution of 17.1 cm.
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2018
Chunlai Li; Shuguo Xing; Sebastian Lauro; Yan Su; Shun Dai; Jian-Qing Feng; Barbara Cosciotti; Federico Di Paolo; Elisabetta Mattei; Yuan Xiao; Chunyu Ding; Elena Pettinelli
Chang’e-3 (CE-3) has been the first spacecraft to soft land on the moon since the Soviet Union’s Luna 24 in 1976. The spacecraft arrived at Mare Imbrium on December 14, 2013, and the same day, Yutu lunar rover separated from lander to start its exploration of the surface and the subsurface around the landing site. The rover was equipped, among other instruments, with two lunar penetrating radar systems having a working frequency of 60 and 500 MHz. The radars acquired data for about two weeks while the rover was slowly moving along a path of about 114 m. At navigation point N0209, the rover got stacked into the lunar soil and after that only data at a fixed position could be collected. The low-frequency radar data have been analyzed by different authors and published in two different papers, which reported totally controversial interpretations of the radar cross sections. This paper is devoted to resolve such controversy by carefully analyzing and comparing the data collected on the moon by Yutu rover and on earth by a prototype of LPR mounted onboard a model of the CE-3 lunar rover. Such analysis demonstrates that the deep radar features previously ascribed to the lunar shallow stratigraphy are not real reflectors, rather they are signal artifacts probably generated by the system and its electromagnetic interaction with the metallic rover.
International Journal of Antennas and Propagation | 2017
Chunyu Ding; Yan Su; Shuguo Xing; Shun Dai; Yuan Xiao; Jian-Qing Feng; Danqing Liu; Chunlai Li
In the process of lunar exploration, and specifically when studying lunar surface structure and thickness, the established lunar regolith model is usually a uniform and ideal structural model, which is not well-suited to describe the real structure of the lunar regolith layer. The present study aims to explain the geological structural information contained in the channel 2 LPR (lunar penetrating radar) data. In this paper, the random medium theory and Apollo drilling core data are used to construct a modeling method based on discrete heterogeneous random media, and the simulation data are processed and collected by the electromagnetic numerical method FDTD (finite-difference time domain). When comparing the LPR data with the simulated data, the heterogeneous random medium model is more consistent with the actual distribution of the media in the lunar regolith layer. It is indicated that the interior structure of the lunar regolith layer at the landing site is not a pure lunar regolith medium but rather a regolith-rock mixture, with rocks of different sizes and shapes. Finally, several reasons are given to explain the formation of the geological structures of the lunar regolith layer at the Chang’E 3 landing site, as well as the possible geological stratification structure.
Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
Jian-Qing Feng; Jianjun Liu; Fei He; Wei Yan; Xin Ren; Xu Tan; Ling-Ping He; Bo Chen; Wei Zuo; Weibin Wen; Yan Su; Yongliao Zou; Chunlai Li
Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
Xu Tan; Jianjun Liu; Chunlai Li; Jian-Qing Feng; Xin Ren; Fen-Fei Wang; Wei Yan; Wei Zuo; XiaoQian Wang; Zhoubin Zhang
Chinese Journal of Geochemistry | 2010
Jian-Qing Feng; Yongliao Zou; Wei Bian; Yongchun Zheng; Chunlai Li
Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
Shun Dai; Yan Su; Yuan Xiao; Jian-Qing Feng; Shuguo Xing; Chunyu Ding
Icarus | 2017
Jian-Qing Feng; Yan Su; Chunyu Ding; Shuguo Xing; Shun Dai; Yongliao Zou
Astrophysics and Space Science | 2016
Yan Yan; Huaning Wang; Han He; Fei He; Bo Chen; Jian-Qing Feng; Jinsong Ping; Chao Shen; Ronglan Xu; Xiaoxin Zhang