P33B-4034:
The New Horizons Bistatic Radio Science Experiment to Measure Pluto's Surface Properties
Wednesday, 17 December 2014
Ivan Linscott1, David P Hinson2, G Leonard Tyler1 and Michael Vincent3, (1)Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States, (2)SETI Institute Mountain View, Mountain View, CA, United States, (3)Southwest Research Institute Boulder, Boulder, CO, United States
Abstract:
The New Horizons (NH) payload includes a Radio Science Experiment (REX) for principally occultation and radiometric measurement of Pluto and Charon during the flyby in July 2015. The REX subsystem is contained, together with the NH X-Band radio, in the Integrated Electronics Module (IEM) in the New Horizons spacecraft. REX samples and records in two polarizations both total RF power in a 4.5 MHz bandwidth, and radio signal waveforms in a narrow, 1.25 kHz band. During the encounter, and at closest approach to Pluto, the spacecraft's high gain antenna (HGA) will scan Pluto's equatorial latitudes, intercepting the specular zone, a region near Pluto's limb that geometrically favors reflection from the earth's direction. At the same time, a powerful 80 kW uplink beacon will have been transmitted from earth by the DSN to arrive at Pluto during spacecraft closest approach. Reflection from the specular zone is expected to be sufficiently strong to observe the bistatic uplink in the REX narrowband record. Measurements in both polarizations will then be combined to yield surface reflectivity, roughness and limits on the dielectric constant in the specular zone.