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Science 29 November 1996: Vol. 274. no. 5292, pp. 1495 - 1498 DOI: 10.1126/science.274.5292.1495
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Reports
The Clementine Bistatic Radar Experiment
S. Nozette,
*
C. L. Lichtenberg,
P. Spudis,
R. Bonner,
W. Ort,
E. Malaret,
M. Robinson,
E. M. Shoemaker
During the Clementine 1 mission, a bistatic radar experiment
measured the magnitude and polarization of the radar echo versus bistatic angle, , for selected lunar areas. Observations of the lunar south pole yield a same-sense polarization enhancement around = 0. Analysis shows that the observed enhancement is localized to the
permanently shadowed regions of the lunar south pole. Radar observations of periodically solar-illuminated lunar surfaces, including the north pole, yielded no such enhancement. A probable explanation for these differences is the presence of low-loss volume
scatterers, such as water ice, in the permanently shadowed region at
the south pole.
S. Nozette, U.S. Air Force Phillips Laboratory, Space Experiments
Directorate, 711 North Fayette Street, Alexandria, VA 22314, USA.
C. L. Lichtenberg, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC 20375, USA.
P. D. Spudis, Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston, TX 77058, USA.
R. Bonner and W. Ort, Protasis Incorporated, Alexandria, VA 22314, USA.
E. Malaret, Applied Coherent Technology, Herndon, VA 22070, USA.
M. Robinson and E. M. Shoemaker, U.S. Geological Survey, Flagstaff, AZ
86001, USA.
*
To whom correspondence should be addressed.
The possibility of ice on the moon was
suggested in 1961 (1). Volatiles degassed from the primitive
moon or deposited on the lunar surface by cometary and asteroidal
impacts might migrate to and collect in permanently shadowed cold traps
near the lunar poles, where they could be stable over geologic time
(1-5). Because these cold traps receive no
direct solar illumination, and emit little radiation, they are
difficult to observe from the Earth. Radar can identify deposits of
frozen volatiles because, under certain conditions, they produce a
unique radar signature (6). However, such radar observations
may not be conclusive depending on the quantity of volatiles present,
the nature of the surface, and the sensitivity of the measurements.
Frozen volatiles have much lower transmission loss than silicate rocks,
producing a higher average radar reflectivity than silicate rocks.
Total internal reflection also preserves the transmitted circular
polarization sense in the scattered signal. An opposition surge or
coherent backscatter opposition effect (CBOE)
(7-12) may also be observed as the phase, or
bistatic angle (Fig. 1), approaches 0. The CBOE
requires scattering centers (cracks or inhomogeneities) imbedded in a
low loss matrix such as ice (7-9). The
preservation of the sense of polarization for CBOE has been observed in
the laboratory using laser illumination of a particle suspension
(13, 14). A high ratio of same sense to opposite
sense polarization and high reflectivity has been detected by radar
observations of the Galilean satellites of Jupiter (15,
16, 17), the residual south polar ice cap of Mars
(18), portions of the Greenland ice sheet (19,
20), and the permanently shadowed polar craters of Mercury
(21-23). These results are generally attributed to total internal reflection and/or CBOE produced by low loss frozen
volatiles (6), although other mechanisms have been proposed (24). High-resolution ground-based synthetic aperture
(monostatic) radar observations, from Arecibo, of the lunar south pole
revealed some small anomalous same-sense polarization bright patches
that are permanently shadowed (25). Brightening and
enhancement of same sense polarization can be caused by double bounce
reflections from large blocks or surface roughness. The presence of
CBOE could distinguish brightening and polarization reversal produced
by a low loss target from other scattering mechanisms. Bistatic radar measurements, using a spacecraft in orbit acting as the transmitter, can be used as a test for CBOE (13, 14,
20) by measuring the echo magnitude and polarization sense
as a function of .
Fig. 1.
Orbital geometry of the Clementine bistatic radar
experiment. The lunar polar tilt relative to the ecliptic (1.6°), the
lunar tilt toward Earth ( 5°), and the bistatic angle between
spacecraft, lunar surface, and Earth receiver are shown.
[View Larger Version of this Image (49K GIF file)]
The Clementine 1 mission (26) provided data on the
environment and geology of the polar regions of the moon
(27, 28). In the northern hemisphere, no large
basin overlaps the polar area. The south pole, however, is located
within the South Pole-Aitken basin (SPA), an impact crater over 2500 km in diameter and averaging 12 km deep near the center of the basin
(29). The pole is about 200 km inside the rim crest of the
SPA. Because of its location inside this topographic low, the elevation
of the south pole is likely to be several kilometers below the mean
lunar radius, resulting in zones of permanent shadow (27,
28). As the Clementine laser altimeter did not operate for
lunar latitudes greater than 70°, there is no altimetry data for the
polar regions. However, multiring basins tend to preserve concentric
symmetry (30), thus the lunar south pole is estimated to lie
about 5 to 8 km. below the highest point of the basin rim (29). If the
elevation of the SPA rim crest on the near side is about 1 km, as
suggested by the global map (31), then the pole would lie at
an elevation of about 4 to 7 km. Study of the illumination
conditions near the south pole of the moon during the mission reveal
near constant illumination of several points within 30 km of the pole
as well as darkness for other areas. Not all dark regions observed by
Clementine are permanently dark, as the images were obtained during
southern winter, near the time when the lunar spin axis obtained its
maximum tilt away from the sun (1.6°). Initial analysis suggested
that up to 30,000 km2 near the south pole was dark during
the mission (27). Further analysis of the Clementine images
of the south pole taken over a two-month period showed that some of
this region was illuminated for a small portion (<10%) of the lunar
month. Images of the north pole taken on alternate orbits (10 hour
intervals) during the first month and images of the south pole taken
during the second month were registered and added together to make
composite images showing the extent of illuminated and darkened areas
(Fig. 2). These composite images show the extent of
darkness near the south pole is much greater than that around the north
pole. Mapping of the shadowed areas within a 2.5° latitude (75 km)
radius circle of both poles reveals at least 6361 km2 of
darkness around the south pole while only 530 km2 of
darkness is measured around the north pole. A conservative analysis
suggests an upper limit of 15,500 km2 of south pole terrain
is likely to be in permanent darkness. As the cold trap area at the
south pole is more extensive than at the north pole, it would be
expected (2) to retain more trapped volatiles.
Fig. 2.
Composite Clementine orbital images of the
poles of the moon, where more than 50 separate images have been summed
together over one lunar day. In these views, areas of near permanent
illumination are white and areas of near permanent darkness are black.
Within 100 km of each pole, the south pole (B) shows
considerable darkness (= cold traps) whereas the immediate surroundings
of the north pole (A) show at least an order of magnitude greater illumination, and are therefore warmer. The scale bar is 100 km. [Ed. note: This has been corrected from what appears in the print product where the poles were incorrectly identified.]
[View Larger Version of this Image (46K GIF file)]
In April 1994, during the times when the Earth passed through the
Clementine orbital plane, the lunar axial tilt toward the Earth as
viewed from the NASA Deep Space Network (DSN) was relatively large
(4.5° to 5.5°). This favorable alignment occurred once for each
pole during the month. At these times the spacecraft, lunar target, and
Earth-based receiver were co-planar with the spacecraft orbital plane,
and included the polar = 0 condition (Fig. 1). Clementine transmitted an unmodulated S-band (2.273 GHz, 13.19 cm
wavelength) right circular polarization (RCP) signal with a net power
of about 6 W through its 1.1 m high gain antenna (HGA), toward a
specific lunar target. One of the DSN 70-m antennas served as a
receiver. On 9 and 10 April 1994, bistatic radar observations were made
of the south pole region during orbits 234, 235, 236, and 237. On 23 and 24 April 1994, observations of the north pole were conducted on
orbits 299, 301, and 302. Analytical results for orbits 234, 235, 301, and 302 are presented here. The other orbits had systematic errors
originating in the spacecraft and the ground stations that made the
data unusable. Interpretation of the surface physical properties
involved comparison of the measured echo components with scattering
models (32). In the initial analysis, the polarization ratio
was compared to and local surface angle of incidence
(33). The scattering values presented represent regional
averages. The normalized radar backscatter cross section (radar cross
section per unit area) was estimated from the radar equation
(34) and specific areas illuminated on the lunar surface.
Typical values of normalized radar cross section derived from
Clementine data for the near-polar regions, 80°(S) to 82.5° (S)
(84° angle of incidence, = ±1°), are 29 dB LCP (left
circular polarization) and 33.5 dB RCP, consistent with previous work
(25). During orbit 234 the = 0 track (the locus of = 0 points) and the center of the HGA beam were close (within 0.5° of
each other and the south pole) which provided for good illumination of
the entire permanently shadowed south pole region at the = 0 condition. Orbit 235 has no = 0 points near the south pole and is
representative of periodically solar illuminated lunar surface. A
noticeable peak in RCP/LCP occurs around = 0 for the orbit 234 Doppler bins contained within a 2.5° radius band centered on the
lunar south pole (Figs. 3 and 4). Orbit 235 yielded no discernible
enhancement in latitude bands that exclude the south pole region (Fig.
3). The peak in the RCP/LCP ratio observed in orbit 234, at = 0, is due to enhanced power received in the RCP channel (Fig.
3) as opposed to a reduction in LCP, as seen at 2.5 to 3.0°. No statistically significant enhancement was observed in
orbit 234 LCP (35).
Fig. 3.
(A) Circular polarization ratio
(RCP/LCP) as a function of for orbit 234 for a 2.5° radius
latitude band centered on the lunar south pole and for orbit 235, for a
2.5° radius periodically illuminated band centered at 82.5°S, and
for orbits 301 and 302, originating from a 2.5° radius band centered
at the north pole. The area sampled is approximately 45,000 km2 (orbits 234, 301, and 302) to 170,000 km2
(orbit 235). (B) Individual polarization channel
(RCP and LCP) echo power response used on a frequency bin-by-bin basis to compute the orbit 234 and 235 polarization ratios.
[View Larger Version of this Image (14K GIF file)]
Fig. 4.
Clementine mosaic of the south pole region of the
moon showing area sampled on orbit 234.The white outline indicates the nominal area at the time of peak RCP response on orbit 234, as shown in
Fig. 3. The limits of this area are defined by contours of constant
Doppler shift of the received signal and the RF terminator on an
idealized spherical moon. The spread of Doppler shift was chosen to
maximize the fraction of permanently shadowed ground in the area
sampled. On the actual moon, the true boundaries are irregular, owing
to topography, and the fraction of the sampled area occupied by
permanently shadowed ground probably is higher than in the idealized
case.
[View Larger Version of this Image (143K GIF file)]
During orbits 301 and 302 the spacecraft was roughly four times closer
to the lunar north pole surface at = 0 than during the south pole
observations. The corresponding antenna pattern had a proportionally
smaller footprint, and the incident power density was roughly an order
of magnitude greater than for the lunar south pole. More sensitivity is
therefore expected in detecting scattering enhancement. The lunar north
pole observations showed no statistically significant polarization
enhancements at = 0 (Fig. 3). These observations were averaged over
a latitude band of 2.5° radius, centered on the north pole,
containing an area comparable with the orbit 234 south pole
observations. As the spacecraft velocity was greater near the north
pole there are fewer = 0 points in orbits 301 and 302. This
produces flatter curves due to the filtering process (Fig 3).
Clementine polar observations were conducted at incidence angles of
82° to 90°. High incidence angle scattering is difficult to predict
and can exhibit unusual behavior due to shadowing, diffraction, and
multiple scattering effects (36). However no polarization
ratio enhancement was observed on orbits 301 and 302, which had similar
high incidence angle geometry and greater surface power illumination
than orbits 234 and 235. Additionally, orbits 234, 235, 301, and 302 were re-analyzed, independently of , to include only target areas at
high local incidence angles (82° to 90°). Only orbit 234 showed an
enhanced polarization ratio at high local incidence angles, which
independently corresponds to south pole illumination at small . All
other orbits exhibited lower polarization ratio and no local angle of
incidence dependent RCP/LCP enhancements. Statistical analysis
(37) yields only a small probability (<5%) that the
polarization ratio enhancement on orbit 234 is due to random variation
in the data (Table 1), and is probably not attributable
to angle of incidence.
It is not certain whether the enhancement seen in orbit 234 is due to
CBOE or some other scattering effect. The CBOE peak usually predicted
from lossless volume scattering should be much narrower (<0.1°), and
also show a larger enhancement in RCP and LCP, than was observed
(7-12, 23). There are several
possible explanations for these observations, including the possibility that they are not due to CBOE from ice deposits. The orbit 234 data
have been averaged over a large area of lunar surface (45,000 km2) of which 14 to 33% is permanently shadowed (Fig.
4). If the putative ice deposits are small and patchy,
the magnitude of the polarization reversal will be muted by reflections
from the larger surrounding lunar surface area. Rocky lunar regolith
may cover and be mixed with any ice deposits, further reducing the peak amplitude by increasing loss in the medium. Using the observed orbit
234 maximum, and median RCP/LCP ratios (Fig. 3 and Table 1), and
methods used to estimate the extent of the Mercury polar deposits
(23), we estimate the pure ice equivalent area of putative south pole ice deposits to be on the order of 0.2 to 0.3% of the observed region, or approximately 90 to 135 km2. This area
is consistent with small patches of high ( 1) RCP/LCP surface observed
from Arecibo (25). The estimate may be a lower limit, as the
viewing geometry does not allow observation of the deepest parts of the
shadowed terrain. The broad orbit 234 RCP/LCP peak and the low value of
RCP/LCP (<1) are consistent with rigorous theoretical calculations of
CBOE for measurements made at grazing incidence angles, assuming
wavelength scale scatterers imbedded in a lossy medium
(7-12). The observed orbit 234 RCP peak width
and magnitude is predicted by CBOE theory if the scattering centers are
nonspherical (11) and cover only a fraction of the sampled
area. In this case the predicted LCP peak amplitude would be
significantly smaller and its width much larger than the observed orbit
234 RCP peak (12), and is not observable in the Clementine data owing to the inherent fluctuation of the much larger LCP background. This does not preclude the existence of a number of small
scattering areas with RCP/LCP >> 1 and corresponding sharper LCP peaks that cannot be resolved in the data. These assumptions are
geologically realistic for patchy, dirty ice. Other scattering mechanisms (roughness, double bounce) might explain the observed south
pole RCP enhancement. However, the Clementine bistatic radar data only
show this enhancement around = 0 in an area at the lunar south pole
containing at least 6361 km2 of permanently shadowed
terrain. Clementine bistatic radar data taken from other,
intermittently sunlit areas with similar geometry, and subjected to the
same data reduction process, show no evidence of such an enhancement.
This leads to the conclusion that the scattering mechanism responsible
for the orbit 234 enhancement is associated with the permanently
shadowed terrain, which is suggestive of a muted CBOE originating from
small patches of ice (and/or other frozen volatiles) covered and mixed
with rocky material.
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Analysis was conducted using fast Fourier transform
(FFT) techniques. The target area is isolated by Doppler shift,
which relates bands of constant frequency to a set of lunar ground
locations (the
= 0 track). The ground points were close enough in
distance to include all of the bands of constant frequency in the
selected area. Repeat responses were filtered out. The analyses to
extract radar scattering information from local regions on the surface
were performed by sorting the Doppler data according to the parameter
of interest. Typical frequency domain transform parameters used were 1 to 4 seconds of noncoherent averaging, 4096 to 16,384 points per FFT, a
von Hann time data window without zero-padding, and magnitude-only
(power) data stored in double-precision output.
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by comparing measured noise from the zenith (20 K), moon center (235 K), and lunar poles (90 K). Measurements of ambient temperature
microwave resistors added further corroborating measurements to the set
of calibration data. The noise baseline, when considered against the
recorded attenuator values, was used to calibrate the amplitude of the
data files into units of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Calibration to
flatten the frequency response variation arising from receiver filters
was performed using noise-only segments of data. The calibrations
included: linear gain change, nonlinear gain change, recording channel
frequency response, system noise temperature changes, erroneous data
bridge-over, transmitter frequency variation, transmitter power
variation, and antenna pointing. A small amount of corrupted data is
inevitably recorded. The short periods of corrupted data were flagged
and suppressed during subsequent analyses. Spacecraft attitude files
were corrected for known time-base and pointing systematic errors.
One-way light-time propagation delay effects were included. Systematic
errors that simultaneously affect the absolute baseline or bias
measurement of each polarization channel were estimated to be less than
±2 dB. Systematic errors in the ratio measurements are estimated at
±0.25 dB. The systematic errors common to both channels are suppressed
when considering the ratio. Thermal noise variation is negligible
because several hundred to several thousand frequency bins were
averaged together, each having a thermal SNR greater than 10. Target
speckle variation is believed to be the dominant stochastic error
source. The mean value and error bars given in Fig. 3 are derived by
reducing the data set standard deviation by the square root of the
number of noncoherently averaged samples represented by each point on
the plot. The use of noncoherently averaged FFTs and numerous
frequency bins reduced this variation to about ±0.1-0.2 dB standard
deviation. Median filtering was used. Due to the time sampling,
regional averaging, and spacecraft system characteristics the
resolution in
is ±0.2°. Due to Doppler bin migration (±1 bin),
phase noise of the spacecraft oscillator (±2 bins), and FFT windowing
effects (±2 bins), the Doppler band regions have an estimated rms
resolution uncertainty of about ±25 km at 80° latitude, for the
16,384 point FFT data files.
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A standard analysis of variance (ANOVA) for unbalanced design
was performed on the data from each orbit. ANOVA tests the null
hypothesis that the means are the same and only appear different in
measurement because of random fluctuations in the data. This analysis
tests the statistical significance of the differences among the means.
The data represented target return bins corresponding to angles of
incidence greater than 82°.
-
The authors thank the NASA/JPL and Deep Space Network
individuals who supported and helped carry out these observations, in
particular S. Asmar; the Clementine lunar operations team led by T. Sorensen, assisted by R. Campion and T. Tran; P. Rustan of the U.S. Air
Force, the Clementine 1 program manager, D. Duston of BMDO, and L. Wood
of LLNL; and R. Simpson and G. Pettengill for review and insight.
Funding for this work was provided by the Department of Defense,
including the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, the Naval
Research Laboratory, the U.S. Air Force Phillips Laboratory Space
Experiments Directorate, the Department of Energy, Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory, and NASA. This paper is Lunar and Planetary
Institute contribution 899.
3 June 1996; accepted 22
October 1996
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