Abstract

Dust transported in the martian atmosphere is of intrinsic scientific interest and has relevance for the planning of human missions in the future. The MSR Campaign, as currently designed, presents an important opportunity to return serendipitous, airfall dust. The tubes containing samples collected by the Perseverance rover would be placed in cache depots on the martian surface perhaps as early as 2023-24 for recovery by a subsequent mission no earlier than 2028-29, and possibly as late as 2030-31. Thus, the sample tube surfaces could passively collect dust for multiple years. This dust is deemed to be exceptionally valuable as it would inform our knowledge and understanding of Mars' global mineralogy, surface processes, surface-atmosphere interactions, and atmospheric circulation. Preliminary calculations suggest that the total mass of such dust on a full set of tubes could be as much as 100 mg and, therefore, sufficient for many types of laboratory analyses. Two planning steps would optimize our ability to take advantage of this opportunity: (1) the dust-covered sample tubes should be loaded into the Orbiting Sample container (OS) with minimal cleaning and (2) the capability to recover this dust early in the workflow within an MSR Sample Receiving Facility (SRF) would need to be established. A further opportunity to advance dust/atmospheric science using MSR, depending upon the design of the MSR Campaign elements, may lie with direct sampling and the return of airborne dust. Summary of Findings FINDING D-1: An accumulation of airfall dust would be an unavoidable consequence of leaving M2020 sample tubes cached and exposed on the surface of Mars. Detailed laboratory analyses of this material would yield new knowledge concerning surface-atmosphere interactions that operate on a global scale, as well as provide input to planning for the future robotic and human exploration of Mars. FINDING D-2: The detailed information that is possible from analysis of airfall dust can only be obtained by investigation in Earth laboratories, and thus this is an important corollary aspect of MSR. The same information cannot be obtained from orbit, from in situ analyses, or from analyses of samples drilled from single locations. FINDING D-3: Given that at least some martian dust would be on the exterior surfaces of any sample tubes returned to Earth, the capability to receive and curate dust in an MSR Sample Receiving Facility (SRF) is essential. SUMMARY STATEMENT: The fact that any sample tubes cached on the martian surface would accumulate some quantity of martian airfall dust presents a low-cost scientifically valuable opportunity. Some of this dust would inadvertently be knocked off as part of tube manipulation operations, but any dust possible should be loaded into the OS along with the sample tubes. This dust should be captured in an SRF and made available for detailed scientific analysis.

Highlights

  • FINDING D-1: An accumulation of airfall dust would be an unavoidable consequence of leaving M2020 sample tubes cached and exposed on the surface of Mars

  • Detailed laboratory analyses of this material would yield new knowledge concerning surfaceatmosphere interactions that operate on a global scale, as well as provide input to planning for the future robotic and human exploration of Mars

  • FINDING D-2: The detailed information that is possible from analysis of airfall dust can only be obtained by investigation in Earth laboratories, and this is an important corollary aspect of MSR

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Summary

Introduction

Planning of the current MSR Campaign has already taken into account the need and opportunity to carry out bulk sampling of granular materials from the martian regolith (see E2E-iSAG, 2011; M2020 SDT, 2014; iMOST, 2019; and references therein). The MSR Campaign would unavoidably return some quantity of what we are calling serendipitous airfall dust. This is dust that falls out of the martian atmosphere onto an exposed surface that could be returned to Earth. At least some of the sample tubes would have multiple years on the martian surface to accumulate airfall dust. A key open question, is how valuable is this dust to science, and what, if anything, needs to be done to capitalize on this scientific opportunity?

Summary of Findings
Previous dust studies
The martian dust cycle
What Could Be Learned from Samples of Martian Dust?
Study of carbon chemistry
Corrosion
Importance of physical and magnetic properties
Atmospheric dynamics and global circulation
Need for returned samples
How Much Dust Is Required?
How much airfall dust might we collect?
Airborne dust—a potential additional sampling opportunity
Summary
Findings
21 References
Full Text
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