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Workshop on New Views of the 6036.pdf

THE LUNAR NEUTRON SPECTROMETER DATA SET. S. Maurice1, W. C. Feldman2, B. L. Barraclough2, R. C. Elphic2, D. J. Lawrence2, A. B. Binder3, 1Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées, 31400 Toulouse, FRANCE, [email protected]; 2Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, 87545 USA; 3Lunar Research Institute, Gilroy, CA 95020, USA.

Introduction: Lunar Prospector carries a the cruise phase showed that most, if not all, of Neutron Spectrometer (NS) whose purpose is (1) these neutrons originate from the Moon. As of late to search for hydrogen, perhaps in the form of June 98, 12 full map-cycle coverages of the Moon buried water at the lunar poles and/or in the have been completed. form of implanted in mature regolith The presentation will explain how the NS data and (2) to map the surface composition in Ti, Fe, set was obtained and processed. Counts integrated and KREEP. Initial analysis of the data have over portions of pulse height spectra that are low shown that NS measurements may also (3) provide in background counts will be presented as a func- valuable clues to the sub-surface temperature and, tion of the surface content in Fe and Ti. In addi- perhaps, surface thermal heat flow. The NS con- tion to these spectra, we shall detail the data of sists of two 5.7 cm diameter by 20 cm long 3He different origins that support the NS analysis: gas proportional counters. One is covered with Cd quantities that are proxies for the rate of cosmic and so responds only to epithermal neutrons (0.3 rays, as well as data that give location eV