[Crater-team] [EXTERNAL] Re: Input for ESM6 Lunar Environment Theme - Radiation
Stubbs, Timothy J {Tim} (GSFC-6950)
timothy.j.stubbs at nasa.gov
Wed Sep 18 14:26:05 EDT 2024
Hi Jody,
It’s certainly important to capture progress to date in ESM5, and I believe that will be included in the proposal.
The focus of the workshop on Friday is what we want to do in ESM6, especially if it’s new and requires more data to be collected. As you indicated, some of this will be a continuation from ESM5.
BTW, the template I sent says ESM5, but I’ll update that to ESM6.
Cheers, Tim
From: Jody Wilson <jkwilson at guero.sr.unh.edu>
Date: Wednesday, September 18, 2024 at 1:30 PM
To: crater-team at lists.sr.unh.edu <crater-team at lists.sr.unh.edu>, Stubbs, Timothy J {Tim} (GSFC-6950) <timothy.j.stubbs at nasa.gov>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [Crater-team] Input for ESM6 Lunar Environment Theme - Radiation
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Thanks, Tim!
I suggest that in the section on Mission Support, under ESM5 progress, we mention the radiation work that has been done so far. I think it would also make sense to include Fatemeh's progress on solar cycle/dose predictions.
Link to section:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1tcX2Y1JWHZ0xL_r1x8ycla7EQYIzHSjz/edit
Specific text/area:
5.4.2. Science Investigations to Support Artemis:
5.4.2.1 CRaTER investigation from ESM5 for support of Artemis:
CRaTER TEAM: we need to include the progress and status of this in the accomplishments and associated table above. Does this continue into ESM6? I note that data from PG-1 (CIS-lunar environment) and IM-2 (south pole) is just being archived and made available roughly now and thus available for incorporation into this investigation for ESM6. Some instruments from the canceled CLPS mission have also been re-manifested (see table of ESM6 missions above).
On 9/18/2024 12:18 PM, Stubbs, Timothy J {Tim} (GSFC-6950) wrote:
Dear All,
At this afternoon’s CRaTER meeting, I’d like to follow-up on the recent discussion we had about the ESM6 proposal.
As the lead for the Lunar Environment theme, I’ve got to give an update at the LRO ESM6 Workshop on Friday.
It would be great to have at least 2 or 3 CRaTER-focused quad charts with some initial ideas. See attached template.
* An obvious topic is solar cycle variability and getting closer to a 22-year Hale Cycle with LRO (due around 2031), which should help better inform on the radiation environment during Artemis missions.
* Phillip and I are working on a quad chart for mapping radiation at the surface with implications for both science and exploration.
Looking forward to getting your input!
Cheers, Tim
From: Crater-team <crater-team-bounces at lists.sr.unh.edu><mailto:crater-team-bounces at lists.sr.unh.edu> on behalf of Harlan Spence <Harlan.Spence at unh.edu><mailto:Harlan.Spence at unh.edu>
Date: Thursday, August 1, 2024 at 11:30 AM
To: crater-team at lists.sr.unh.edu<mailto:crater-team at lists.sr.unh.edu> <crater-team at lists.sr.unh.edu><mailto:crater-team at lists.sr.unh.edu>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] [BULK] [Crater-team] FW: Slides from PSWG
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All,
Please see the attached slides from the most recent LRO PSWG meeting. For the first time ever, the proposal includes a direct reference to CRaTER (Section on Lunar Environment – Radiation). We have a few pages to make the case for our extended science effort.
Would everyone please give this some thought in the next few weeks? The PDF shows the timetable for the proposal preparation. Noah has given us an opening to shine so let’s be proactive and come forward with our best ideas. To get this going, perhaps a starting point would be to identify the title of any new studies to be done with CRaTER data in ESM6. For each, it would be good to identify which would require data from other LRO instruments (that would be most highly desirable, but not necessary). Also, for each, it would be great to identify whether any different kind of data is required (for CRaTER, I think we’ve plumbed the depths of that, aside from additional and/or different kinds of slews). And finally, why do we need more data rather than use existing data (for us, the traditional answer is that we are probing the solar cycle and so more data is different data – when we hit 22 years in operation, then that argument starts to weaken, though every 11 and 22-year cycle are different!).
Time to put on our thinking caps! We can start discussing at next week’s CRaTER call.
Thanks,
* Harlan
_________________________________
Dr. Harlan E. Spence
Director, Institute for the Study of Earth,
Oceans, and Space
Professor of Physics and Astronomy
Morse Hall, Room 306
University of New Hampshire
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Durham, NH 03824-3525
Phone: 603-862-0322
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__________________________________
From: Petro, Noah (GSFC-6980) via lro-science-telecon <lro-science-telecon at lists.nasa.gov><mailto:lro-science-telecon at lists.nasa.gov>
Date: Monday, July 22, 2024 at 9:28 AM
To: LRO Science <lro-science-telecon at lists.nasa.gov><mailto:lro-science-telecon at lists.nasa.gov>, lro-science-team at lists.nasa.gov<mailto:lro-science-team at lists.nasa.gov> <lro-science-team at lists.nasa.gov><mailto:lro-science-team at lists.nasa.gov>
Subject: [lro-science-telecon] Slides from PSWG
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Team,
Attached are the slides presented last Friday on ESM6. I’d encourage the teams to work towards identifying the science questions (requiring new data) for ESM6 in the next month. Don’t assume anything is not worth pursuing, just yet.
-Noah
--
Noah Petro<https://science.gsfc.nasa.gov/sed/bio/noah.e.petro>
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Planetary Geology, Geophysics, and Geochemistry Lab (Code 698)
Building 34, Room S284
Greenbelt, MD 20771
Ph: 301.614.6498
M: 240.521.7867
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"Ex luna, scientia"
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