IAG-IASPEI 2017

Presentation information

Oral

IASPEI Symposia » S19. Planetary seismology

[S19-3] Seismic missions and instruments: from insight to future projects on small bodies and planets with atmosphere

Tue. Aug 1, 2017 8:30 AM - 10:00 AM Room 402 (Kobe International Conference Center 4F, Room 402)

Chairs: Bruce Banerdt (Jet Propulsion Laboratory) , Philippe Lognonné (Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris-Sorbonne Paris Cité)

9:00 AM - 9:15 AM

[S19-3-02] The InSight VBB seismometer: status and perspective for future missions

Tanguy Nebut1, 2, 3, Sebastien Deraucourt1, 3, Philippe Lognonne1,3, William Banerdt4, Glenn Aveni1, Rob Calvet4, Pierre-Alain Dandonneau1,2, Melanie Drilleau1,2,3, Taoufik Gabsi1,2,3, Kenneth Hurst4, Benoit Lecomte2, Michel Parise1,2,3, Olivier Robert1,2,3, Sylvain Tillier1,2,3, Gabriel Pont5, Nicolas Verdier5, Philippe Laudet5, Lucile Fayon1,6, Hubert Halloin6, SEIS/VBB Team7 (1.Institut de Physique du Globe-Sorbonne Paris Cite, FRANCE, 2.Centre National de Recherche Scientifique, FRANCE, 3.Universite Paris Diderot, Paris, FRANCE, 4.Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA, 5.Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales, FRANCE, 6.Astro Particule et Cosmologie, Paris, FRANCE, 7.http://seis-insight.eu)

invited

SEIS is the primary payload of the NASA InSight mission due for launch on 5/2018. The instrument includes notably a Very Broad Band (VBB) 3 axis seismometer developed by the IPGP under CNES funding and subcontracted to EADS-SODERN for fabrication of the Flight Units.
Oblique VBB axis are inverted pendulum, with a 190 g mobile mass and natural frequency in the range of 0.4-0.5 Hz. A Displacement Capacitive Sensor detect the mobile mass movement with a resolution better than 5 pm/Hz^(1/2) at 1 Hz and drives the Feedback electronics. A ‘Balance Mechanism' allows adjusting very precisely pendulum balance position and correct leveling errors, gravity value uncertainty and instrument ageing. A ‘Thermal Compensation Mechanism' allows minimizing VBB thermal sensitivity passively with less than 10-5 m/s^2/K. Each axis power is smaller than 60mW and the performances requirement is 10^(-9) m/s^2/Hz^(1/2) between 0.01Hz and 1 Hz. Space qualification benefited from expertise from several CNES, JPL and SODERN experts.
By mid-February 2017, six VBBs had successfully completed their ProtoFlight Test program and one additional will be delivered before the end of the first 2017 trimester. These sensors will be integrated either in the FM Sphere (SEIS-SPH) or in its spare.
Performances in accordance with noise models have been demonstrated with previous prototypes and additional tests in 2017 will be made in BFO seismic observatory. The SEIS experiment will therefore provide high-quality seismic signal acquisition and associated seismic information during one Martian year, i.e. the nominal mission duration.
Future VBBs will be candidate for seismic missions requesting low noise sensors, such as those planed to the Moon in the 2020-2030 decade. Expected performances for a Moon VBBs will be at least one order of magnitude better than Apollo, and even larger improvement can be envisaged with an optical version, presently in development through IPGP-APC partnership