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Astrobiology | 2012

The O/OREOS Mission: First Science Data from the Space Environment Viability of Organics (SEVO) Payload

Andrew Mattioda; Amanda Cook; Pascale Ehrenfreund; Richard C. Quinn; Antonio J. Ricco; David Squires; Nathan Earl Bramall; Kathryn L. Bryson; Julie Diane Chittenden; Giovanni Minelli; Elwood Agasid; Lou Allamandola; Chris Beasley; Roland Burton; Greg Defouw; Millan Diaz-Aguado; Mark Fonda; Charles Friedericks; Christopher Kitts; David Landis; Mike McIntyre; Michael Neumann; Mike Rasay; Robert Ricks; Farid Salama; Orlando Santos; Aaron Schooley; Bruce Yost; Anthony Young

We report the first science results from the Space Environment Viability of Organics (SEVO) payload aboard the Organism/Organic Exposure to Orbital Stresses (O/OREOS) free-flying nanosatellite, which completed its nominal spaceflight mission in May 2011 but continues to acquire data biweekly. The SEVO payload integrates a compact UV-visible-NIR spectrometer, utilizing the Sun as its light source, with a 24-cell sample carousel that houses four classes of vacuum-deposited organic thin films: polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH), amino acid, metalloporphyrin, and quinone. The organic films are enclosed in hermetically sealed sample cells that contain one of four astrobiologically relevant microenvironments. Results are reported in this paper for the first 309 days of the mission, during which the samples were exposed for ∼2210 h to direct solar illumination (∼1080 kJ/cm(2) of solar energy over the 124-2600 nm range). Transmission spectra (200-1000 nm) were recorded for each film, at first daily and subsequently every 15 days, along with a solar spectrum and the dark response of the detector array. Results presented here include eight preflight and 16 in-flight spectra of eight SEVO sample cells. Spectra from the PAH thin film in a water-vapor-containing microenvironment indicate measurable change due to solar irradiation in orbit, while three other nominally water-free microenvironments show no appreciable change. The quinone anthrarufin showed high photostability and no significant spectroscopically measurable change in any of the four microenvironments during the same period. The SEVO experiment provides the first in situ real-time analysis of the photostability of organic compounds and biomarkers in orbit.


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2015

Window contamination on Expose-R

René Demets; Marylène Bertrand; A. Bolkhovitinov; Kathryn L. Bryson; C. Colas; H. Cottin; Jan Dettmann; Pascale Ehrenfreund; Andreas Elsaesser; E. Jaramillo; M. Lebert; G. van Papendrecht; C. Pereira; T. Rohr; Kafila Saiagh; M. Schuster

Expose is a multi-user instrument for astrobiological and astrochemical experiments in space. InstalledattheoutersurfaceoftheInternationalSpaceStation, itenablesinvestigatorstostudytheimpactof the open space environment on biological and biochemical test samples. Two Expose missions have been completedso far,designatedasExpose-E (Rabbowet al.2012) andExpose-R(Rabbowet al.this issue).One of the space-unique environmental factors offered by Expose is full-spectrum, ultraviolet (UV)-rich electromagnetic radiation from the Sun. This paper describes and analyses how on Expose-R, access of the test samples to Solar radiation degraded during space exposure in an unpredicted way. Several windows in front of the Sun-exposed test samples acquired a brown shade, resulting in a reduced transparency in visible light, UV and vacuum UV (VUV). Post-flight investigations revealed the discolouration to be caused by a homogenous film of cross-linked organic polymers at the inside of the windows. The chemical signature varied per sample carrier. No such films were found on windows from sealed, pressurized compartments, or on windows that had been kept out of the Sun. This suggests that volatile compounds originating from the interior of the Expose facility were cross-linked and photo-fixed by Solar irradiation at the rear side of the windows. The origin of the volatiles was not fully identified; most probably there was a variety of sources involved including the biological test samples, adhesives, plastics and printed circuit boards. The outer surface of the windows (pointing into space) was chemically impacted as well, with a probable effect on the transparency in VUV. The reported analysis of the window contamination on Expose-R is expected to help theinterpretationofthescientificresultsandofferspossibilitiestomitigatethisproblemonfuturemissions - in particular Expose-R2, the direct successor of Expose-R.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2007

Sublimation rate of ice under simulated Mars conditions and the effect of layers of mock regolith JSC Mars‐1

Vincent F. Chevrier; Derek W. G. Sears; Julie Diane Chittenden; Larry A. Roe; Richard Ulrich; Kathryn L. Bryson; Lisa Billingsley; Jennifer Hanley


Icarus | 2008

Stability of ice on Mars and the water vapor diurnal cycle: Experimental study of the sublimation of ice through a fine-grained basaltic regolith

Kathryn L. Bryson; Vincent F. Chevrier; Derek W. G. Sears; Richard Ulrich


Icarus | 2008

Experimental study of the effect of wind on the stability of water ice on Mars

Julie Diane Chittenden; Vincent F. Chevrier; Larry A. Roe; Kathryn L. Bryson; R. Pilgrim; Derek W. G. Sears


Acta Astronautica | 2014

The O/OREOS mission—Astrobiology in low Earth orbit

Pascale Ehrenfreund; Antonio J. Ricco; David Squires; Christopher Kitts; Elwood Agasid; Nathan Earl Bramall; Kathryn L. Bryson; Julie Diane Chittenden; Catharine A. Conley; Amanda Cook; Rocco L. Mancinelli; Andrew Mattioda; Wayne L. Nicholson; Richard C. Quinn; Orlando Santos; G. Tahu; M. Voytek; Chris Beasley; Laura Bica; Millan Diaz-Aguado; Charlie Friedericks; Mike Henschke; David Landis; Ed Luzzi; Diana Ly; Nghia Mai; Giovanni Minelli; Mike McIntyre; Michael Neumann; Macarena Parra


Planetary and Space Science | 2010

Sublimation kinetics of CO2 ice on Mars

David G. Blackburn; Kathryn L. Bryson; Vincent F. Chevrier; Larry A. Roe; Krista F. White


Planetary and Space Science | 2012

The development of the Space Environment Viability of Organics (SEVO) experiment aboard the Organism/Organic Exposure to Orbital Stresses (O/OREOS) satellite

Nathan Earl Bramall; Richard C. Quinn; Andrew Mattioda; Kathryn L. Bryson; Julie Diane Chittenden; Amanda Cook; Cindy Taylor; Giovanni Minelli; Pascale Ehrenfreund; Antonio J. Ricco; David Squires; Orlando Santos; Charles Friedericks; David Landis; Nykola C. Jones; Farid Salama; Louis J. Allamandola; Søren V. Hoffmann


Archive | 2010

O/OREOS Nanosatellite: A Multi-Payload Technology Demonstration

Giovanni Minelli; Antonio J. Ricco; Christopher Beasley; John W. Hines; Elwood Agasid; Bruce Yost; David Squires; Charlie Friedericks; Matthew Piccini; Greg Defouw; Mike McIntyre; Robert Ricks; Macarena Parra; Millan Diaz-Aguado; Linda Timucin; Mike Henschke; Matthew P. Lera; Ming Tan; Mike Cohen; Karolyn Ronzano; Ed Luzzi; Nghia Mai; Aaron Schooley; Dianna Ly; Eric Stackpole; Jeffrey Lin; John Tucker; Pascale Ehrenfreund; Nathan Santos; Bramall


Icarus | 2010

Evaporation effects on the formation of martian gullies

Kathryn L. Bryson; John C. Dixon; Derek W. G. Sears

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Pascale Ehrenfreund

George Washington University

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