Understanding the origin of the Martian moons is the main objective of the JAXA MMX (Martian Moons eXploration) mission, that will be launched in October 2026. Among the 13 instruments composing the payload, MIRS is an infrared imaging spectrometer that will map the mineralogy and search for organic compounds on the moons’ surfaces. MIRS will also study the Martian atmosphere, focusing on the spatial and temporal variations of water, dust and clouds. MIRS is operating in the 0.9-3.6 μm spectral range with a spectral resolution varying from 22 nm to 32 nm. The field of view covers 3.3° whereas the instantaneous field of view is 0.35 mrad. This presentation will detail the design and present the end-to-end performance obtained during the final instrument test in a representative thermal environment.
Martian Moons eXplorer (MMX) is a sample-return mission of Phobos, the larger moon of Mars. To achieve the mission, a high-resolution 3D model of Phobos is essential, which requires a large number of high-resolution images to be sent back to Earth with enough quality before carrying out the landing activity. To realize this, the data transfer bandwidth is the bottleneck, and we adopt CCSDS 122.0-B-1 image compression, a variation of data compression based on the DWT method. This method allows us to select only one output quality for one image compression. On the other hand, the data transfer strategy shall be to transfer minimum-quality images first for quick looks and full-quality ones later. To realize this with the least computing power, we modified the method to output a low-quality full image and two supplemental data sets to better quality. This work is based on the CCSDS 122.0-B-1 implementation by a group of the University of Nebraska Lincoln.
MIRS (MMX InfraRed Spectrometer) is an imaging spectrometer onboard of MMX (Martian Moon eXploration) mission. MMX is a JAXA sample return mission that will be launched in September 2024 to Martian system, to bring back to Earth sample from Phobos, to observe in detail Phobos and Deimos and to monitor Mars’s atmosphere with observations of dust storm, clouds, and distributions of total amount of water vapor. The main objectives of the mission are to understand the origin of Martian moons, to constrain the processes for planetary formation and to understand the evolutionary processes of the Martian system. MIRS is a push-broom imaging spectrometer working in the range from 0.9 to 3.6 micron.
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