The first X-ray diffraction measurements on Mars
The first X-ray diffraction measurements on Mars
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Date
2014-11
Authors
Bish, David L.
Treiman, Allan H.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8073-2839
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Union of Crystallography
Abstract
The Mars Science Laboratory landed in Gale crater on Mars in August 2012, and the Curiosity rover then began field studies on its drive toward Mount Sharp, a central peak made of ancient sediments. CheMin is one of ten instruments on or inside the rover, all designed to provide detailed information on the rocks, soils and atmosphere in this region. CheMin is a miniaturized X-ray diffraction/X-ray fluorescence (XRD/XRF) instrument that uses transmission geometry with an energy-discriminating CCD detector. CheMin uses onboard standards for XRD and XRF calibration, and beryl:quartz mixtures constitute the primary XRD standards. Four samples have been analysed by CheMin, namely a soil sample, two samples drilled from mudstones and a sample drilled from a sandstone.
Description
Keywords
X-ray diffraction imaging,
Mars (Planet),
Mineralogy
Citation
Bish D, D Blake, D Vaniman, P Sarrazin, T Bristow, C Achilles, P Dera, et al. 2014. "The first X-ray diffraction measurements on Mars". IUCrJ. 1: 514-22.