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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Mauna Kea, Hawaii, as an Analog Site for Future Planetary Resource Exploration: Results from the 2010 ILSO-ISRU Field-Testing Campaign

M. BlumersRoss TaylorR. Glenn SellarInge Loes Ten KateEric CaillibotDaniel P. GlavinJack D. FarmerJorge I. NunezD. BoucherRichard V. MorrisJanine CaptainLeanne SigurdsonJacqueline QuinnJohn C. HamiltonKris ZacnyB. BernhardtGabriele M. T. D'eleuterioTrevor G. GraffGöstar KlingelhöferGerald B. SandersRob ArmstrongJack Craft

subject

BasaltScientific instrumentgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryMechanical EngineeringAerospace EngineeringDrillingIn situ resource utilizationGas analyzerSpace explorationVolcanoMartian surfaceEnvironmental scienceGeneral Materials ScienceCivil and Structural EngineeringRemote sensing

description

Within the framework of the International Lunar Surface Operation - In-Situ Resource Utilization Analogue Test held on January 27 - February 11, 2010 on the Mauna Kea volcano in Hawaii, a number of scientific instrument teams collaborated to characterize the field site and test instrument capabilities outside laboratory environments. In this paper, we provide a geological setting for this new field-test site, a description of the instruments that were tested during the 2010 ILSO-ISRU field campaign, and a short discussion for each instrument about the validity and use of the results obtained during the test. These results will form a catalogue that may serve as reference for future test campaigns. In this paper we provide a description and regional geological setting for a new field analogue test site for lunar resource exploration, and discuss results obtained from the 2010 ILSO-ISRU field campaign as a reference for future field-testing at this site. The following instruments were tested: a multispectral microscopic imager, MMI, a Mossbauer spectrometer, an evolved gas analyzer, VAPoR, and an oxygen and volatile extractor called RESOLVE. Preliminary results show that the sediments change from dry, organic-poor, poorly-sorted volcaniclastic sand on the surface, containing basalt, iron oxides and clays, to more water- and organic-rich, fine grained, well-sorted volcaniclastic sand, primarily consisting of iron oxides and depleted of basalt and clays. Furthermore, drilling experiments showed a very close correlation between drilling on the Moon and drilling at the test site. The ILSO-ISRU test site was an ideal location for testing strategies for in situ resource exploration at the lunar or martian surface.

https://doi.org/10.1061/(asce)as.1943-5525.0000200