9:00 AM - 9:15 AM
[PPS06-01] Lunar Impact Flash Observing Mission by 6U Spacecraft EQUULEUS (1): Mission Summary and Initial Results
★Invited Papers
Keywords:Lunar impact flash, Meteoroids, Solar system small bodies, 6U Spacecraft
Through the lunar impact flash observations, we will be able to (1) clarify the size and mass distribution functions and impact frequency of meteoroids sizing between centimeters and several tens of centimeters, (2) explore the internal structure of the Moon by collaborating with moonquake measurements, (3) search for new craters related with LIF events and better understanding the physics of celestial hypervelocity impacts. It can also be used to evaluate the affected region by impact ejecta and to confirm the impact site by artificial space debris in the future.
"EQUULEUS" is a 6U CubeSat developed by the University of Tokyo and JAXA, which will fly to a libration orbit around the second Earth-Moon Lagrange Point (EML2) as a piggy-back payload of NASA's Space Launch System (SLS). The lunar impact flash observing camera "DELPHINUS" onboard EQUULEUS, developed in collaboration with Nihon University, the University of Electro-Communications, the University of Tokyo, JAXA, and major manufacturers, has been launched on November 16, 2022, as one of the secondary payloads of NASA Artemis 1 SLS and successfully detached from the SLS on the way to the moon. After the checkout operation and the first light imaging, the camera successfully took a series of images of the far side of the moon during the lunar flyby.
This paper describes the mission summary of the lunar impact flash observing camera onboard 6U Spacecraft EQUULEUS and also reports on the performance evaluation comparing the images obtained so far and data obtained from ground tests, and introduces the future mission schedule and expected results.