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Astrobiology | 2017

The PanCam instrument for the ExoMars Rover

A. J. Coates; R. Jaumann; Andrew D. Griffiths; Craig Leff; N. Schmitz; Jean-Luc Josset; Gerhard Paar; Matthew Gunn; Ernst Hauber; Claire R. Cousins; Rachel Elizabeth Cross; Peter Grindrod; John C. Bridges; Matthew R. Balme; Sanjeev Gupta; Ian A. Crawford; Patrick G. J. Irwin; Roger Stabbins; Daniela Tirsch; Jorge L. Vago; M.~P. Caballo-Perucha; Gordon R. Osinski

Abstract The scientific objectives of the ExoMars rover are designed to answer several key questions in the search for life on Mars. In particular, the unique subsurface drill will address some of these, such as the possible existence and stability of subsurface organics. PanCam will establish the surface geological and morphological context for the mission, working in collaboration with other context instruments. Here, we describe the PanCam scientific objectives in geology, atmospheric science, and 3-D vision. We discuss the design of PanCam, which includes a stereo pair of Wide Angle Cameras (WACs), each of which has an 11-position filter wheel and a High Resolution Camera (HRC) for high-resolution investigations of rock texture at a distance. The cameras and electronics are housed in an optical bench that provides the mechanical interface to the rover mast and a planetary protection barrier. The electronic interface is via the PanCam Interface Unit (PIU), and power conditioning is via a DC-DC converter. PanCam also includes a calibration target mounted on the rover deck for radiometric calibration, fiducial markers for geometric calibration, and a rover inspection mirror. Key Words: Mars—ExoMars—Instrumentation—Geology—Atmosphere—Exobiology—Context. Astrobiology 17, 511–541.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The JANUS camera onboard JUICE mission for Jupiter system optical imaging

Vincenzo Della Corte; N. Schmitz; M. Zusi; José María Bermúdez de Castro; M. R. Leese; Stefano Debei; Demetrio Magrin; Harald Michalik; P. Palumbo; R. Jaumann; G. Cremonese; Harald Hoffmann; Andrew D. Holland; Luisa M. Lara; Björn Fiethe; Enrico Friso; Davide Greggio; M. Herranz; Alexander Koncz; Alexander Lichopoj; Ignacio Martinez-Navajas; Elena Mazzotta Epifani; Harald Michaelis; Roberto Ragazzoni; Thomas Roatsch; Julio Rodrigo; Emilio Rodriguez; Pietro Schipani; Matthew Soman; Mirco Zaccariotto

JANUS (Jovis, Amorum ac Natorum Undique Scrutator) is the visible camera selected for the ESA JUICE mission to the Jupiter system. Resources constraints, S/C characteristics, mission design, environment and the great variability of observing conditions for several targets put stringent constraints on instrument architecture. In addition to the usual requirements for a planetary mission, the problem of mass and power consumption is particularly stringent due to the long-lasting cruising and operations at large distance from the Sun. JANUS design shall cope with a wide range of targets, from Jupiter atmosphere, to solid satellite surfaces, exosphere, rings, and lightning, all to be observed in several color and narrow-band filters. All targets shall be tracked during the mission and in some specific cases the DTM will be derived from stereo imaging. Mission design allows a quite long time range for observations in Jupiter system, with orbits around Jupiter and multiple fly-bys of satellites for 2.5 years, followed by about 6 months in orbit around Ganymede, at surface distances variable from 104 to few hundreds km. Our concept was based on a single optical channel, which was fine-tuned to cover all scientific objectives based on low to high-resolution imaging. A catoptric telescope with excellent optical quality is coupled with a rectangular detector, avoiding any scanning mechanism. In this paper the present JANUS design and its foreseen scientific capabilities are discussed.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

A preliminary optical design for the JANUS camera of ESA's space mission JUICE

Davide Greggio; Demetrio Magrin; Roberto Ragazzoni; Matteo Munari; G. Cremonese; Maria Bergomi; Marco Dima; Jacopo Farinato; Luca Marafatto; Valentina Viotto; Stefano Debei; V. Della Corte; P. Palumbo; Harald Hoffmann; R. Jaumann; Harald Michaelis; N. Schmitz; Pietro Schipani; Luisa M. Lara

The JANUS (Jovis, Amorum ac Natorum Undique Scrutator) will be the on board camera of the ESA JUICE satellite dedicated to the study of Jupiter and its moons, in particular Ganymede and Europa. This optical channel will provide surface maps with plate scale of 15 microrad/pixel with both narrow and broad band filters in the spectral range between 0.35 and 1.05 micrometers over a Field of View 1.72 × 1.29 degrees2. The current optical design is based on TMA design, with on-axis pupil and off-axis field of view. The optical stop is located at the secondary mirror providing an effective collecting area of 7854 mm2 (100 mm entrance pupil diameter) and allowing a simple internal baffling for first order straylight rejection. The nominal optical performances are almost limited by the diffraction and assure a nominal MTF better than 63% all over the whole Field of View. We describe here the optical design of the camera adopted as baseline together with the trade-off that has led us to this solution.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Trade-off between TMA and RC configurations for JANUS camera

Davide Greggio; Demetrio Magrin; Matteo Munari; Riccardo Paolinetti; Andrea Turella; M. Zusi; G. Cremonese; Stefano Debei; V. Della Corte; Enrico Friso; Harald Hoffmann; R. Jaumann; Harald Michaelis; Raffaele Mugnuolo; A. Olivieri; P. Palumbo; Roberto Ragazzoni; N. Schmitz

JANUS (Jovis Amorum Ac Natorum Undique Scrutator) is a high-resolution visible camera designed for the ESA space mission JUICE (Jupiter Icy moons Explorer). The main scientific goal of JANUS is to observe the surface of the Jupiter satellites Ganymede and Europa in order to characterize their physical and geological properties. During the design phases, we have proposed two possible optical configurations: a Three Mirror Anastigmat (TMA) and a Ritchey-Chrétien (RC) both matching the performance requirements. Here we describe the two optical solutions and compare their performance both in terms of achieved optical quality, sensitivity to misalignment and stray light performances.


PROCEEDINGS OF SPIE, THE INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR OPTICAL ENGINEERING | 2015

Optical design and stray light analysis for the JANUS camera of the JUICE space mission

Davide Greggio; Demetrio Magrin; Matteo Munari; M. Zusi; Roberto Ragazzoni; G. Cremonese; Stefano Debei; Enrico Friso; V. Della Corte; P. Palumbo; Harald Hoffmann; R. Jaumann; Harald Michaelis; N. Schmitz; Pietro Schipani; L. M. Lara

The JUICE (JUpiter ICy moons Explorer) satellite of the European Space Agency (ESA) is dedicated to the detailed study of Jupiter and its moons. Among the whole instrument suite, JANUS (Jovis, Amorum ac Natorum Undique Scrutator) is the camera system of JUICE designed for imaging at visible wavelengths. It will conduct an in-depth study of Ganymede, Callisto and Europa, and explore most of the Jovian system and Jupiter itself, performing, in the case of Ganymede, a global mapping of the satellite with a resolution of 400 m/px. The optical design chosen to meet the scientific goals of JANUS is a three mirror anastigmatic system in an off-axis configuration. To ensure that the achieved contrast is high enough to observe the features on the surface of the satellites, we also performed a preliminary stray light analysis of the telescope. We provide here a short description of the optical design and we present the procedure adopted to evaluate the stray-light expected during the mapping phase of the surface of Ganymede. We also use the results obtained from the first run of simulations to optimize the baffle design.


Planetary and Space Science | 2012

Supporting Mars exploration: BIOMEX in Low Earth Orbit and further astrobiological studies on the Moon using Raman and PanCam technology

Jean-Pierre de Vera; U. Boettger; Rosa de la Torre Noetzel; F. J. Sánchez; Dana Grunow; N. Schmitz; Caroline Lange; Heinz-Wilhelm Hübers; Daniela Billi; Mickael Baqué; Petra Rettberg; Elke Rabbow; Günther Reitz; Thomas Berger; R. Möller; Maria Bohmeier; Gerda Horneck; Frances Westall; J. Jänchen; Jörg Fritz; C. Meyer; Silvano Onofri; Laura Selbmann; Laura Zucconi; Natalia Kozyrovska; Thomas Leya; Bernard H. Foing; René Demets; Charles S. Cockell; Casey Bryce


Planetary and Space Science | 2012

Geology, geochemistry, and geophysics of the Moon: Status of current understanding

R. Jaumann; Harald Hiesinger; M. Anand; Ian A. Crawford; Roland Wagner; Frank Sohl; Bradley L. Jolliff; Frank Scholten; Martin Knapmeyer; Harald Hoffmann; Hauke Hussmann; Matthias Grott; Stefanie Hempel; U. Köhler; Katrin Krohn; N. Schmitz; James Carpenter; Mark A. Wieczorek; Tilman Spohn; Mark S. Robinson; J. Oberst


Experimental Astronomy | 2012

OSS (Outer Solar System): A fundamental and planetary physics mission to Neptune, Triton and the Kuiper Belt

Bruno Christophe; Linda J. Spilker; John D. Anderson; N. André; Sami W. Asmar; Jonathan M. Aurnou; Donald J. Banfield; Antonella M. Barucci; Orfeu Bertolami; R. Bingham; P. Brown; B. Cecconi; Jean-Michel Courty; Hansjörg Dittus; Leigh N. Fletcher; Bernard Foulon; Frederico Francisco; P. J. S. Gil; Karl-Heinz Glassmeier; William M. Grundy; Candice J. Hansen; Jörn Helbert; Ravit Helled; Hauke Hussmann; Brahim Lamine; Claus Lämmerzahl; L. Lamy; Rolland Lehoucq; Benjamin Lenoir; Agnès Levy


Planetary and Space Science | 2012

Lunar PanCam: Adapting ExoMars PanCam for the ESA Lunar Lander

A. J. Coates; Andrew D. Griffiths; Craig Leff; N. Schmitz; Dave Barnes; Jean-Luc Josset; B.K. Hancock; Claire R. Cousins; R. Jaumann; Ian A. Crawford; Gerhard Paar; Arnold Bauer


Archive | 2011

Multi-Spectral Vision Processing for the ExoMars 2018 Mission

Dave Barnes; Martin Charles Wilding; Matthew Gunn; Stephen Pugh; Laurence Tyler; A. J. Coates; Andrew D. Griffiths; Claire R. Cousins; N. Schmitz; Arnold Bauer; Gerhard Paar

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R. Jaumann

German Aerospace Center

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Jens Biele

German Aerospace Center

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Ernst Hauber

German Aerospace Center

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