The project Lunar Volatiles Mobile Instrumentation—Extended (LUVMI-X) developed an initial system design as well as payload and mobility breadboards for a small, lightweight rover dedicated for in situ exploration of the lunar south pole. One of the proposed payloads is the Volatiles Identification by Laser Analysis instrument (VOILA), which uses laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) to analyze the elemental composition of the lunar surface with an emphasis on sampling regolith and the detection of hydrogen for the inference of the presence of water. It is designed to analyze targets in front of the rover at variable focus between 300 mm and 500 mm. The spectrometer covers the wavelength range from 350 nm to 790 nm, which includes the...
Following the Apollo era the moon was considered a volatile poor body. Samples collected from the Ap...
LIBS is an upcoming spectroscopic technique for in-situ space exploration. Some elements, especially...
International audienceRecently, there has been an increasing interest in the laser-induced breakdown...
Abstract: The project Lunar Volatiles Mobile Instrumentation—Extended (LUVMI-X) developed an initi...
With the confirmation of water ice in the lunar polar regions, the Moon has recently come into the f...
Water at the lunar south pole is of great interest for upcoming lunar exploration endeavors. Here, w...
The low inclination of the lunar orbit allows areas in high and low latitudes to remain in eternal d...
In this paper, we report on the on-going development of a compact analytical instrument for future m...
The low inclination of the lunar orbit allows areas in high latitudes to remain in eternal darkness....
International audienceAbstract The search for exploitable deposits of water and other volatiles at t...
Recent remote sensing missions have established the presence of water-ice in permanently shadowed re...
Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) receives increasing interest in the field of space explo...
We present the latest iteration of the Lunar Volatiles Scout (LVS), a novel instrument to acces...
Our current knowledge about the Moon's resource potential is limited to remote-sensing measurements ...
Recent remote sensing missions have established the presence of water-ice in permanently shadowed re...
Following the Apollo era the moon was considered a volatile poor body. Samples collected from the Ap...
LIBS is an upcoming spectroscopic technique for in-situ space exploration. Some elements, especially...
International audienceRecently, there has been an increasing interest in the laser-induced breakdown...
Abstract: The project Lunar Volatiles Mobile Instrumentation—Extended (LUVMI-X) developed an initi...
With the confirmation of water ice in the lunar polar regions, the Moon has recently come into the f...
Water at the lunar south pole is of great interest for upcoming lunar exploration endeavors. Here, w...
The low inclination of the lunar orbit allows areas in high and low latitudes to remain in eternal d...
In this paper, we report on the on-going development of a compact analytical instrument for future m...
The low inclination of the lunar orbit allows areas in high latitudes to remain in eternal darkness....
International audienceAbstract The search for exploitable deposits of water and other volatiles at t...
Recent remote sensing missions have established the presence of water-ice in permanently shadowed re...
Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) receives increasing interest in the field of space explo...
We present the latest iteration of the Lunar Volatiles Scout (LVS), a novel instrument to acces...
Our current knowledge about the Moon's resource potential is limited to remote-sensing measurements ...
Recent remote sensing missions have established the presence of water-ice in permanently shadowed re...
Following the Apollo era the moon was considered a volatile poor body. Samples collected from the Ap...
LIBS is an upcoming spectroscopic technique for in-situ space exploration. Some elements, especially...
International audienceRecently, there has been an increasing interest in the laser-induced breakdown...