David J Lawrence, John O Goldsten, Patrick N Peplowski, Morgan T Burks, Shuo Cheng, Michael J Cully, Jordan M Effron, Linda T Elkins-Tanton, Raymond C Espiritu, Samuel G Fix, Milena B Graziano, Erin M Hoffer, Insoo Jun, Geon-Bo Kim, Nathan R Hines, Mark T LeBlanc, Evan M Livingstone, Kathryn M Marcotte, Timothy J McCoy, Carol A Polanskey, Meena Sreekantamurthy, Zachary W Yokley
{"title":"普赛克伽马射线和中子光谱仪。","authors":"David J Lawrence, John O Goldsten, Patrick N Peplowski, Morgan T Burks, Shuo Cheng, Michael J Cully, Jordan M Effron, Linda T Elkins-Tanton, Raymond C Espiritu, Samuel G Fix, Milena B Graziano, Erin M Hoffer, Insoo Jun, Geon-Bo Kim, Nathan R Hines, Mark T LeBlanc, Evan M Livingstone, Kathryn M Marcotte, Timothy J McCoy, Carol A Polanskey, Meena Sreekantamurthy, Zachary W Yokley","doi":"10.1007/s11214-025-01201-6","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>A Gamma-Ray and Neutron Spectrometer (GRNS) instrument has been developed as part of the science payload for NASA's Discovery Program Psyche mission to the M-class asteroid (16) Psyche. The GRNS instrument is designed to measure the elemental composition of Psyche with the goal to understand the origin of this mysterious, potentially metal-rich planetary body. The GRNS will measure the near-surface abundances for the elements Ni, Fe, Si, K, S, Al, and Ca, as well as the spatial distribution of Psyche's metal-to-silicate fraction (or metal fraction). These measurements address three of the five Psyche mission science objectives: determine if Psyche is a core; determine whether small metal bodies incorporate light elements into the metal phase; and determine whether Psyche was formed under reducing conditions. The Gamma-Ray Spectrometer (GRS) uses a cryocooled, high-purity Ge (HPGe) sensor to detect cosmic-ray generated gamma rays in the 60 to 9000-keV energy range. The HPGe sensor is surrounded by a borated plastic anticoincidence shield that provides three functions: active background rejection from charged particle interactions in the HPGe sensor; fast neutron measurements; and direct measurements of the incident galactic cosmic ray flux. The Neutron Spectrometer (NS) uses three <sup>3</sup>He gas proportional sensors, each with different material wraps to measure thermal (<0.4 eV), low-energy epithermal (0.4 eV to 1 keV), and high-energy epithermal (up to 100 keV) neutrons. This paper provides an overview of the Psyche GRNS, including: its science and measurement objectives; the design of the instrument hardware, software, and operation; pre-launch performance measurements and its initial performance in space; and an overview of its data products and expected operation for different Psyche mission phases.</p>","PeriodicalId":21902,"journal":{"name":"Space Science Reviews","volume":"221 6","pages":"78"},"PeriodicalIF":7.4000,"publicationDate":"2025-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12402037/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Psyche Gamma-Ray and Neutron Spectrometer.\",\"authors\":\"David J Lawrence, John O Goldsten, Patrick N Peplowski, Morgan T Burks, Shuo Cheng, Michael J Cully, Jordan M Effron, Linda T Elkins-Tanton, Raymond C Espiritu, Samuel G Fix, Milena B Graziano, Erin M Hoffer, Insoo Jun, Geon-Bo Kim, Nathan R Hines, Mark T LeBlanc, Evan M Livingstone, Kathryn M Marcotte, Timothy J McCoy, Carol A Polanskey, Meena Sreekantamurthy, Zachary W Yokley\",\"doi\":\"10.1007/s11214-025-01201-6\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>A Gamma-Ray and Neutron Spectrometer (GRNS) instrument has been developed as part of the science payload for NASA's Discovery Program Psyche mission to the M-class asteroid (16) Psyche. The GRNS instrument is designed to measure the elemental composition of Psyche with the goal to understand the origin of this mysterious, potentially metal-rich planetary body. The GRNS will measure the near-surface abundances for the elements Ni, Fe, Si, K, S, Al, and Ca, as well as the spatial distribution of Psyche's metal-to-silicate fraction (or metal fraction). These measurements address three of the five Psyche mission science objectives: determine if Psyche is a core; determine whether small metal bodies incorporate light elements into the metal phase; and determine whether Psyche was formed under reducing conditions. The Gamma-Ray Spectrometer (GRS) uses a cryocooled, high-purity Ge (HPGe) sensor to detect cosmic-ray generated gamma rays in the 60 to 9000-keV energy range. The HPGe sensor is surrounded by a borated plastic anticoincidence shield that provides three functions: active background rejection from charged particle interactions in the HPGe sensor; fast neutron measurements; and direct measurements of the incident galactic cosmic ray flux. The Neutron Spectrometer (NS) uses three <sup>3</sup>He gas proportional sensors, each with different material wraps to measure thermal (<0.4 eV), low-energy epithermal (0.4 eV to 1 keV), and high-energy epithermal (up to 100 keV) neutrons. 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A Gamma-Ray and Neutron Spectrometer (GRNS) instrument has been developed as part of the science payload for NASA's Discovery Program Psyche mission to the M-class asteroid (16) Psyche. The GRNS instrument is designed to measure the elemental composition of Psyche with the goal to understand the origin of this mysterious, potentially metal-rich planetary body. The GRNS will measure the near-surface abundances for the elements Ni, Fe, Si, K, S, Al, and Ca, as well as the spatial distribution of Psyche's metal-to-silicate fraction (or metal fraction). These measurements address three of the five Psyche mission science objectives: determine if Psyche is a core; determine whether small metal bodies incorporate light elements into the metal phase; and determine whether Psyche was formed under reducing conditions. The Gamma-Ray Spectrometer (GRS) uses a cryocooled, high-purity Ge (HPGe) sensor to detect cosmic-ray generated gamma rays in the 60 to 9000-keV energy range. The HPGe sensor is surrounded by a borated plastic anticoincidence shield that provides three functions: active background rejection from charged particle interactions in the HPGe sensor; fast neutron measurements; and direct measurements of the incident galactic cosmic ray flux. The Neutron Spectrometer (NS) uses three 3He gas proportional sensors, each with different material wraps to measure thermal (<0.4 eV), low-energy epithermal (0.4 eV to 1 keV), and high-energy epithermal (up to 100 keV) neutrons. This paper provides an overview of the Psyche GRNS, including: its science and measurement objectives; the design of the instrument hardware, software, and operation; pre-launch performance measurements and its initial performance in space; and an overview of its data products and expected operation for different Psyche mission phases.
期刊介绍:
Space Science Reviews (SSRv) stands as an international journal dedicated to scientific space research, offering a contemporary synthesis across various branches of space exploration. Emphasizing scientific outcomes and instruments, SSRv spans astrophysics, physics of planetary systems, solar physics, and the physics of magnetospheres & interplanetary matter.
Beyond Topical Collections and invited Review Articles, Space Science Reviews welcomes unsolicited Review Articles and Special Communications. The latter encompass papers related to a prior topical volume/collection, report-type papers, or timely contributions addressing a robust combination of space science and technology. These papers succinctly summarize both the science and technology aspects of instruments or missions in a single publication.