NMLS Mission Simulation and Delivery Update

Neutron Measurements on the Lunar Surface (NMLS) is a project to deliver an instrument manifested on Astrobotic Technology’s Peregrine Lander Mission One, to be launched on the new ULA Vulcan Centaur, landing on the Lacus Mortis plateau (44oN, 25oE). Astrobotic was selected as a commercial lander provider to deliver fourteen payloads to the lunar surface under the NASA Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative. The NMLS instrument is a re-design of the Fast Neutron Spectrometer (FNS) currently operating on the ISS, enabling lunar surface operation, integration into the Peregrine Lander and measurement of the thermal and epi-thermal neutron count rates on the Moon. The primary science objectives for the NMLS project are to provide ground truth for neutron map data from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and Lunar Prospector missions as well as to constrain surface composition models. Neutrons are created on the Moon’s surface when galactic cosmic rays interact with the lunar regolith, and can provide valuable elemental composition information. The project recently participated in its second mission simulation with Astrobotic. Commands were successfully passed from the project server in Huntsville to the Astrobotic server in Pittsburg (without the instrument in the loop). Three new voice loop console operators were trained in command procedures. The flight instrument delivery date has now been set by Astrobotic to be NET late-2022. Funding for the NMLS project is provided through the NASA SMD Lunar Discovery and Exploration (LDEP) Program.

NMLS Instrument integrated
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