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Published June 1998 | public
Journal Article

The Mars Oxidant experiment (MOx) for Mars '96

Abstract

The MOx instrument was developed to characterize the reactive nature of the martian soil. The objectives of MOx were: (1) to measure the rate of degradation of organics in the martian environment; (2) to determine if the reactions seen by the Viking biology experiments were caused by a soil oxidant and measure the reactivity of the soil and atmosphere; (3) to monitor the degradation, when exposed to the martian environment, of materials of potential use in future missions; and, finally, (4) to develop technologies and approaches that can be part of future soil analysis instrumentation. The basic approach taken in the MOx instrument was to place a variety of materials composed as thin films in contact with the soil and monitor the physical and chemical changes that result. The optical reflectance of the thin films was the primary sensing mode. Thin films of organic materials, metals, and semiconductors were prepared. Laboratory simulations demonstrated the response of thin films to active oxidants.

Additional Information

© 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. Received 1 August 1997; revised 23 November 1997; accepted 23 November 1997. We gratefully acknowledge helpful technical discussions with B. C. Clark of Martin Marietta. At JPL the project benefited from the technical support of T. Kenny. L. Miller. M. Hecht. M. Homer. R. Terhune, P. Niedermann. B. J. Nakamura. M. A. Ryan, J. Podosek and E. Vote (now deceased). S. Fortier. H. Price, E. Carrel. K. Manatt, S. KUO. and R. Anderson. We also thank the outside support contractors. Palermo. S. Rudaz. J. Fouquet, A. Liao, M. Klausmeier-Brown. C. A. Ray, E. Miller. R. J. Buss, and J. Saunders. Work at Sandia National Laboratories was performed under contract to NASA. Sandia supported by the United States Department of Energy under Contract DE-AC04 94AL85000, is a multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed Martin Company, for the United States Department of Energy. C.P.M., A.P.Z. and R.C.Q. acknowledge support from the NASA Exobiology Program under RTOP 185-52-72-15.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 26, 2023