The SuperCam Instrument Suite on the NASA Mars 2020 Rover: Body Unit and Combined System Tests
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2021-02Author
Wiens, Roger C.
Maurice, Sylvestre
Robinson, Scott H.
Nelson, Anthony E.
Cais, Philippe
Bernardi, Pernelle
Newell, Raymond T.
Clegg, Sam
Sharma, Shiv K.
Storms, Steven
Deming, Jonathan
Beckman, Darrel
Ollila, Ann M.
Gasnault, Olivier
Anderson, Ryan B.
Andre, Yves
Michael Angel, S.
Arana Momoitio, Gorka
Auden, Elizabeth
Beck, Pierre
Becker, Joseph
Benzerara, Karim
Bernard, Sylvain
Beyssac, Olivier
Borges, Louis
Bousquet, Bruno
Boyd, Kerry
Caffrey, Michael
Carlson, Jeffrey
Celis, Jorden
Chide, Baptiste
Clark, Kevin
Cloutis, Edward
Cordoba, Elizabeth C.
Cousin, Agnes
Dale, Magdalena
Deflores, Lauren
Delapp, Dorothea
Deleuze, Muriel
Dirmyer, Matthew
Donny, Christophe
Dromart, Gilles
Duran, George M.
Egan, Miles
Ervin, Joan
Fabre, Cecile
Fau, Amaury
Fischer, Woodward
Forni, Olivie
Fouchet, Thierry
Fresquez, Reuben
Frydenvang, Jens
Gasway, Denine
Gontijo, Ivair
Grotzinger, John
Jacob, Xavier
Jacquinod, Sophie
Johnson, Jeffrey R.
Klisiewicz, Roberta A.
Lake, James
Lanza, Nina
Laserna, Javier
Lasue, Jeremie
Le Mouelic, Stephane
Legett, Carey
Leveille, Richard
Lewin, Eric
López Reyes, Guillermo
Lorenz, Ralph
Lorigny, Eric
Love, Steven P.
Lucero, Briana
Madariaga Mota, Juan Manuel
Madsen, Morten
Madsen, Soren
Mangold, Nicolas
Manrique, José Antonio
Martínez, J. P.
Martínez Frías, Jesús
McCabe, Kevin P.
McConnochie, Timothy H.
McGlown, Justin M.
McLennan, Scott M.
Melikechi, Noureddine
Meslin, Pierre-Yves
Michel, John M.
Mimoun, David
Misra, Anupam
Montagnac, Gilles
Montmessin, Franck
Mousset, Valerie
Murdoch, Naomi
Newsom, Horton
Ott, Logan A.
Ousnamer, Zachary R.
Pares, Laurent
Parot, Yann
Pawluczyk, Rafal
Peterson, C. Glen
Pilleri, Paolo
Pinet, Patrick
Pont, Gabriel
Poulet, Francois
Provost, Cheryl
Quertier, Benjamin
Quinn, Heather
Rapin, William
Reess, Jean-Michel
Regan, Amy H.
Reyes Newell, Adriana L.
Romano, Philip J.
Royer, Clement
Rull, Fernando
Sandoval, Benigno
Sarrao, Joseph H.
Sautter, Violaine
Schoppers, Marcel J.
Schroeder, Susanne
Seitz, Daniel
Shepherd, Terra
Sobrón, Pablo
Dubois, Bruno
Sridhar, Vishnu
Toplis, Michael J.
Trettel, Ian A.
Underwood, Mark
Valdez, Andrés
Valdez, Jacob
Venhaus, Dawn
Willis, Peter
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Space Science Reviews 217(1) : (2021) // Article ID 4
Abstract
The SuperCam instrument suite provides theMars 2020 rover, Perseverance, with a number of versatile remote-sensing techniques that can be used at long distance as well as within the robotic-arm workspace. These include laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS), remote time-resolved Raman and luminescence spectroscopies, and visible and infrared (VISIR; separately referred to as VIS and IR) reflectance spectroscopy. A remote micro-imager (RMI) provides high-resolution color context imaging, and a microphone can be used as a stand-alone tool for environmental studies or to determine physical properties of rocks and soils from shock waves of laser-produced plasmas. SuperCam is built in three parts: The mast unit (MU), consisting of the laser, telescope, RMI, IR spectrometer, and associated electronics, is described in a companion paper. The on-board calibration targets are described in another companion paper. Here we describe SuperCam's body unit (BU) and testing of the integrated instrument.
The BU, mounted inside the rover body, receives light from the MU via a 5.8 m optical fiber. The light is split into three wavelength bands by a demultiplexer, and is routed via fiber bundles to three optical spectrometers, two of which (UV and violet; 245-340 and 385-465 nm) are crossed Czerny-Turner reflection spectrometers, nearly identical to their counterparts on ChemCam. The third is a high-efficiency transmission spectrometer containing an optical intensifier capable of gating exposures to 100 ns or longer, with variable delay times relative to the laser pulse. This spectrometer covers 535-853 nm (105-7070 cm-1 Raman shift relative to the 532 nm green laser beam) with 12 cm-1 full-width at half-maximum peak resolution in the Raman fingerprint region. The BU electronics boards interface with the rover and control the instrument, returning data to the rover. Thermal systems maintain a warm temperature during cruise to Mars to avoid contamination on the optics, and cool the detectors during operations on Mars.