The X-ray spectrometer ‘CLASS’ on the Chandrayaan-2 orbiter has map an abundance of sodium on the moon for the first time, according to the Indian Space Research Organisation.
Chandrayaan-1 X-ray Fluorescence Spectrometer (C1XS) detect sodium from its characteristic line in X-rays which open up the possibility of mapping the amount of sodium on the moon, ISRO said.
In a recent work publish in ‘The Astrophysical Journal Letters’, Chandrayaan-2 map the abundance of sodium on the Moon for the very first time using CLASS (Chandrayaan-2 Large Area Soft X-ray Spectrometer), the national space agency said in a statement.
As per statement :
The study finds that a part of the signal could be arising from a thin veneer of sodium atoms weakly bound to the lunar grains.
These sodium atoms can be nudge out of the surface by solar wind or ultraviolet radiation more easily than if they were part of the lunar minerals.
Also shown is a diurnal variation of the surface sodium that would explain the continuous supply of atoms to the exosphere, sustaining it, the statement said.
An interesting aspect that widens the interest in this alkali element is its presence in the wispy atmosphere of the moon, a region so thin that the atoms there rarely meet.
This region, term an ‘exosphere‘, begins at the surface of the moon and extends many thousand kilometres merging into the interplanetary space, the statement note.
ISRO said :