ExoMars
ExoMars is an astrobiology programme led by the European Space Agency (ESA) to search for evidence of past or present life on Mars through atmospheric analysis and surface exploration.[1]
The programme consists of two missions: the 2016 launch delivered the Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO), which successfully entered Mars orbit and continues to map trace gases like methane that could indicate geological or biological activity, and the Schiaparelli demonstration lander, which crashed during its descent on 19 October 2016 due to a computer software error that misread accelerometer data and prematurely jettisoned the parachute and backshell.[2]
The second mission centers on the Rosalind Franklin rover, designed to drill up to 2 meters into the Martian subsurface to collect and analyze samples for organic compounds using instruments including a mass spectrometer provided by NASA, marking Europe's first mobile planetary rover.[3][4]
Originally a joint effort with Roscosmos for launch and landing elements, the mission faced indefinite suspension in March 2022 after Russia's invasion of Ukraine eroded trust in the partnership, prompting ESA to develop an independent European landing platform and reschedule the launch for 2028 aboard an American rocket, with arrival on Mars anticipated in 2030.[5][6]
Programme Overview
Scientific Objectives and Rationale
The ExoMars programme seeks to determine whether life has ever existed on Mars, addressing a core question in astrobiology by investigating potential biosignatures in the atmosphere, surface, and subsurface.[2] This pursuit is grounded in evidence from prior missions, including morphological indicators of past liquid water, detection of organic compounds, and atmospheric compositions suggestive of active processes that could be biological or geological in origin.[2] Mars' geological stability, with minimal tectonic resurfacing, has preserved rocks older than 3 billion years, offering a record of early habitable conditions analogous to Earth's primordial environment but less altered by subsequent biological overprinting.[7] The Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO), operational since 2018, targets trace atmospheric constituents, particularly methane (CH₄) and its isotopes, to map their global distribution, seasonal variations, and vertical profiles with unprecedented resolution.[8] Methane's short atmospheric lifetime (approximately 200–600 years) and observed plumes imply recent production, potentially from subsurface geological venting or microbial methanogenesis, necessitating precise source localization to discriminate biogenic from abiotic origins.[9] Complementary measurements of other trace gases, such as water vapor and carbon monoxide, provide context for atmospheric chemistry and escape processes influencing habitability.[8] The Rosalind Franklin rover complements TGO by focusing on surface and subsurface exploration, using a 2-meter drill to access samples shielded from solar ultraviolet radiation, perchlorate oxidants, and cosmic rays that degrade surface organics within millions of years.[7] Key objectives include characterizing the shallow subsurface geochemical and hydrological environment, analyzing ancient sedimentary formations and evaporitic deposits for preserved organics and minerals indicative of past aqueous activity, and assessing biomarker degradation mechanisms.[7] The Pasteur instrument suite enables in-situ detection of complex organics via Raman spectroscopy, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, and microscopy, targeting sites with high potential for early Mars habitability to test for molecular evidence of extinct life.[7] These efforts also demonstrate technologies for future sample return missions, enhancing prospects for definitive life detection.[7]International Partnerships and Structure
The ExoMars programme is coordinated by the European Space Agency (ESA) as part of its Exploration Programme, with contributions from its 22 member states and select cooperating nations. Originally conceived in collaboration with NASA, which planned to provide launch and landing technologies, the partnership shifted after NASA's withdrawal in February 2012 due to U.S. budget shortfalls exceeding $2 billion.[9] ESA then formalized a joint endeavour with Roscosmos on 14 March 2013, whereby Russia supplied the Proton-M launcher, components for the Entry, Descent and Landing (EDL) system including parachutes and propulsion, and instruments such as the ADRON-EM neutron spectrometer and the ISEM infrared spectrometer.[10] [11] This agreement allocated approximately €1 billion of the programme's €1.5 billion cost to ESA, with Roscosmos covering the balance through hardware and launch services.[4] Contributions from ESA member states are distributed across industrial consortia and scientific payloads, with the United Kingdom serving as the second-largest funder at €287 million and leading rover platform development through Airbus Defence and Space UK.[12] [4] France, Germany, and Italy—ESA's top overall contributors—provide major shares of funding and expertise, including Thales Alenia Space in Italy for the rover's structure and panoramic instruments, and France's CNES for subsurface radar elements.[13] Additional inputs come from nations such as Poland and Romania (up to €70 million combined for instrumentation), Spain (drill mechanisms), and Switzerland (mass spectrometry), with nine rover instruments led by principal investigators from seven countries.[14] The programme's governance falls under ESA's ministerial councils, where member states approve budgets and milestones, such as the €450 million commitment in November 2012 for the 2016 and 2020 missions.[12] In response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, ESA suspended Roscosmos cooperation on 17 March 2022, citing inability to proceed under existing terms, and formally terminated the partnership in July 2022 amid European Union sanctions.[5] [15] This necessitated replanning, with ESA securing €360 million from member states in December 2022 to advance the Rosalind Franklin rover toward a 2028 launch.[16] On 16 May 2024, ESA and NASA agreed to new terms, with the U.S. providing a commercial launch vehicle, EDL hardware (including parachutes and descent propulsion), and radioisotope heater units to ensure rover viability in Mars' cold environment, marking NASA's re-entry as a key partner without Russian involvement.[17] [18] This structure emphasizes ESA's industrial core while leveraging U.S. expertise for critical mission enablers, with ongoing ESA efforts to finalize a dedicated Mars telecommunications orbiter.[5]Historical Development
Inception and Initial Planning (2005–2010)
The ExoMars programme emerged as a key component of the European Space Agency's (ESA) Aurora Exploration Programme, which was established in 2001 to define a long-term strategy for solar system exploration, including robotic precursors to potential human missions.[19] The initial ExoMars concept focused on an exobiology rover mission designed to search for evidence of past or present microbial life on Mars through subsurface sampling up to 2 meters deep, surface mobility, and in-situ analysis.[20] On 12 December 2005, ESA's Ministerial Council in Berlin approved the continuation of the Aurora Programme and granted formal approval for ExoMars as its flagship robotic mission, with a baseline budget of approximately €650 million. [21] This decision saw subscriptions from 14 member states, including newcomers Denmark and Ireland, committing to the project's development as Europe's first led surface mission to Mars, targeted for launch in 2011.[22] The baseline architecture comprised a carrier module for interplanetary cruise and Mars orbit insertion, paired with a descent module delivering the rover to the surface.[23] Following approval, ESA initiated detailed planning phases, including Phase A feasibility studies and Phase B1 preliminary design in 2006–2007, refining the rover's instrumentation for organic detection, mineralogy, and geochemistry while addressing entry, descent, and landing challenges.[24] To overcome Europe's lack of a suitable heavy-lift launch vehicle, ESA pursued collaboration with NASA, leading to a memorandum of understanding (MoU) for contributions such as an Atlas V launch, entry-descent-landing technologies, and possibly scientific instruments.[23] These early efforts emphasized technological demonstrations for future human exploration, such as hazard avoidance and subsurface access, amid ongoing budget deliberations and concept iterations.[23] By 2008, preliminary contracts for Phase B2 detailed design were anticipated, signaling a shift toward an enhanced mission scope incorporating an orbiter for trace gas analysis, though the core rover remained central to initial planning through 2010.[25] This period solidified ExoMars as a cornerstone of European planetary science, prioritizing astrobiological objectives over broader atmospheric or geological surveys initially proposed in Aurora roadmaps.[26]Partnership Shifts and 2016 Mission Approval
The ExoMars programme initially pursued collaboration with NASA, which was set to provide launch vehicles for both the 2016 orbiter-lander mission and the planned 2018 rover mission, along with contributions to the entry, descent, and landing (EDL) systems.[27] However, in 2011, NASA notified the European Space Agency (ESA) of its inability to commit due to uncertain budget projections, prompting ESA to seek alternative partners to avoid mission cancellation.[27] This shift was driven by NASA's prioritization of its own Mars exploration architecture, including the Mars Science Laboratory and subsequent missions, which strained resources for international commitments.[27] In October 2011, ESA formally invited Roscosmos, Russia's space agency, to become the full-fledged partner, replacing NASA and assuming responsibilities for Proton rocket launches, EDL technology contributions, and partial funding.[27] Negotiations culminated in a bilateral agreement signed on March 14, 2013, at ESA headquarters in Paris, formalizing joint development of the 2016 Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) paired with the Schiaparelli Entry, Descent and Landing Demonstrator Module (EDM), and the subsequent 2018 rover mission.[10] Under this pact, Roscosmos committed to providing two Proton-M launches, while ESA led spacecraft design and operations, with NASA retaining a minor role via the Electra telecommunications package on TGO.[10] [28] The partnership enabled ESA's Ministerial Council to greenlight full-scale implementation, with the final industrial contract for the 2016 mission elements signed on June 17, 2013, at the Paris Air Show, securing Thales Alenia Space for orbiter assembly.[29] This approval resolved prior funding and technical uncertainties, aligning the mission with a March 14–25, 2016, launch window from Baikonur Cosmodrome using a Proton-M/Briz-M rocket.[29] [30] The agreement emphasized complementary expertise—ESA's in orbital science and Roscosmos's in heavy-lift launches—facilitating the programme's progression despite geopolitical risks later realized.[10]Post-2016 Delays and Replanning
Following the successful orbit insertion of the Trace Gas Orbiter in October 2016 and the crash of the Schiaparelli demonstration lander during its descent attempt the same month, the ExoMars rover mission—initially targeted for launch in 2018—faced repeated postponements due to persistent technical challenges. Primary issues included failures in qualifying the large parachutes required for the rover's entry, descent, and landing (EDL) system during high-altitude drop tests, as well as problems with electronic components in the landing platform provided by Roscosmos.[31][32] These setbacks, compounded by the need for additional integration and testing time, led the European Space Agency (ESA) and Roscosmos to defer the launch first to July 2020, then definitively to the 2022 Earth-Mars alignment window (August–October 2022) in a joint announcement on March 12, 2020.[5][33] The COVID-19 pandemic further exacerbated delays by disrupting supply chains, testing facilities, and international collaboration, though ESA maintained that core technical resolutions were progressing. However, geopolitical tensions escalated in February 2022 with Russia's invasion of Ukraine, prompting ESA's Ministerial Council to suspend all ongoing cooperation with Roscosmos on March 17, 2022, citing the impossibility of proceeding with the Russian-provided Proton rocket for launch and the Kazachok descent module for the rover's surface platform.[34] This decision effectively halted preparations for the 2022 slot, as Roscosmos contributions accounted for critical EDL hardware and launch services integral to the mission architecture agreed upon in 2016.[35] Replanning efforts intensified post-suspension, with ESA prioritizing European autonomy in deep-space access. In July 2022, formal termination of the partnership was confirmed, shifting focus to alternatives such as an Airbus-developed lander platform to replace Kazachok and potential launches via ESA's Ariane 6 rocket or NASA's Space Launch System.[35] By November 2022, ESA secured €730 million in additional member-state funding to sustain rover development and initiate lander redesign, preserving the Rosalind Franklin rover's core instrumentation despite integration uncertainties.[36] The revised timeline targets a 2028 launch during the next viable Earth-Mars window, allowing 2–3 years for lander qualification and EDL testing, though Airbus has noted risks of further slippage in constructing the third lander iteration.[5][37] As of early 2025, ESA reports ongoing reconfiguration without Russian elements, emphasizing enhanced subsurface drilling capabilities to meet astrobiology goals amid these adaptations.[38]Geopolitical Suspension and Restart (2022–Present)
In response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, the European Space Agency (ESA) suspended cooperation with Roscosmos on the ExoMars programme on March 17, 2022, halting preparations for the Rosalind Franklin rover's planned September 2022 launch aboard a Russian Proton rocket.[34] This decision followed Roscosmos' withdrawal of personnel from Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana and broader Western sanctions against Russia, which disrupted supply chains for critical components like the lander's parachute system and propulsion elements previously allocated to Russian contributions.[34] The suspension preserved the nearly completed rover hardware, which was placed in controlled storage to mitigate degradation risks, but it stranded ESA without a viable heavy-lift launch vehicle or certain descent technologies integral to the mission's architecture.[5] By July 12, 2022, ESA formally terminated its partnership with Roscosmos on the rover mission, citing irreconcilable geopolitical constraints and the need to realign with European security priorities, despite the mutual investments exceeding €1 billion and the mission's advanced development stage.[5] ESA member states then initiated a search for alternative partners, prioritizing independence from Russian technology while addressing gaps in launch capabilities, radioisotope heaters, and landing systems; initial discussions with NASA focused on leveraging U.S. expertise in Mars entry, descent, and landing (EDL) to replace Russian elements.[5] This shift underscored the causal impact of state-level conflicts on international scientific endeavours, where prior collaborative frameworks—built over years of technical integration—proved vulnerable to abrupt diplomatic ruptures, forcing costly redesigns and delays estimated at two to three years.[5] Restart efforts gained momentum in late 2022, with ESA securing commitments to maintain the programme through ministerial-level funding and exploring European or U.S. launch options, such as adaptations to Ariane 6 or commercial providers.[39] In April 2024, ESA awarded a €150 million contract to Thales Alenia Space and partners to resume rover assembly, instrumentation integration, and testing, signaling a commitment to proceed without Russian involvement.[39] A formal partnership agreement with NASA, finalized by mid-2024, provides U.S. support for EDL technologies, radioisotope power units, and potential launch assistance, enabling the mission's revival under a revised timeline targeting an October-December 2028 launch window and a 2030 landing at Oxia Planum.[14] As of early 2025, the rover remains on track despite U.S. budget uncertainties, with ESA emphasizing self-reliance in propulsion and launch to mitigate future geopolitical dependencies.[13]2016 Mission Components
Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) Design and Operations
The Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) is a spacecraft bus derived from Thales Alenia Space's SpaceBus platform, measuring 3.2 m in height by 2 m in width and depth, with deployable solar arrays spanning 17.5 m tip-to-tip to generate approximately 2000 W of electrical power.[8][40] The orbiter's launch mass was 3732 kg, excluding the 577 kg Schiaparelli lander, with a payload mass of 113.8 kg dedicated to scientific instruments.[8] Propulsion systems include bipropellant thrusters for major maneuvers such as orbit insertion and monopropellant for attitude control, enabling precise pointing for observations.[9] The scientific payload comprises four instrument suites optimized for trace gas detection and surface mapping: the Nadir and Occultation for Mars Discovery (NOMAD) spectrometer with two infrared channels and one ultraviolet-visible channel for near-continuous atmospheric profiling; the Atmospheric Chemistry Suite (ACS) with three infrared spectrometers targeting mid-infrared absorption features of trace species; the Colour and Stereo Surface Imaging System (CaSSIS) for high-resolution stereo imaging at 4.5 m/pixel; and the Fine-Resolution Epithermal Neutron Detector (FREND) for mapping hydrogen-rich subsurface deposits to depths of about 1 m.[41][42] These instruments operate primarily in nadir-viewing and solar occultation modes to achieve sensitivities down to parts-per-billion for gases like methane.[43] Additionally, NASA's Electra proximity link provides UHF relay capabilities for communicating with future Mars surface assets, supporting data rates up to 2 Mbps from landers or rovers.[44][45] TGO launched on March 14, 2016, aboard a Proton-M rocket from Baikonur Cosmodrome and arrived at Mars on October 19, 2016, executing a propulsive orbit insertion burn to enter an initial highly elliptical orbit with a pericenter of about 400 km and apocenter exceeding 33,000 km.[8] Aerobraking commenced in October 2016, using repeated atmospheric passes to reduce apocenter gradually, with over 10,000 dips completed by April 2018, transitioning to a near-circular science orbit at 400 km altitude and 74° inclination relative to the Martian equator, with a period of approximately 4.65 sols.[46][9] Science operations fully activated in April 2018 following payload commissioning, focusing on repeated global mapping of atmospheric composition, temperature profiles, and surface features, with NOMAD and ACS conducting occultation measurements during every orbit to track diurnal and seasonal variations in trace gases.[8] As of October 2025, TGO remains fully operational, continuing nominal science observations while demonstrating extended relay functionality, including support for potential future ExoMars elements and ad-hoc tasks such as imaging interstellar objects like comet 3I/ATLAS on October 3, 2025.[47] The spacecraft's design incorporates radiation-hardened avionics and fault-tolerant redundancy to withstand Mars' harsh environment, ensuring longevity beyond the baseline two-year mission.[40]Schiaparelli Lander Development and Deployment
The Schiaparelli Entry, Descent and Landing Demonstrator Module (EDM) was conceived as a technology demonstration for Mars atmospheric entry, descent, and landing (EDL) capabilities, essential for the subsequent ExoMars rover mission.[48] Development began following the approval of the ExoMars 2016 mission in 2012, with the primary goal of validating EDL systems including a heat shield, parachute deployment, radar altimeter, and propulsion for final braking.[49] The lander, named Schiaparelli in November 2013 after the Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli, featured a 2.4-meter diameter aeroshell with a 70° sphere-cone front shield and a truncated conical back shell, designed to withstand entry velocities of approximately 21,000 km/h.[50] [49] Key subsystems included a Doppler radar altimeter for terrain-relative navigation, liquid-propellant thrusters for powered descent, and a parachute system to decelerate from supersonic to subsonic speeds.[51] The payload comprised the DREAMS meteorological package with instruments for measuring wind speed, atmospheric pressure, temperature, and electric fields, alongside COMARS+ sensors on the back cover for aerothermal data during entry.[52] Designed for a controlled but unguided landing on Meridiani Planum capable of handling slopes up to 12.5° and rocks up to 40 cm high, Schiaparelli lacked obstacle avoidance and relied on passive systems for touchdown.[53] Development involved ESA-led efforts with contributions from European industries, including Thales Alenia Space for structural elements, and focused on testing through drop tests and simulations to mitigate risks identified in prior Mars landing failures.[49] Schiaparelli launched on 14 March 2016 aboard a Proton-M rocket from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, integrated with the Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) as a hitchhiker payload with a total launch mass of 577 kg.[54] [55] After a seven-month interplanetary cruise, the lander separated from TGO on 16 October 2016 at 14:42 GMT, initiating a three-day coast phase toward Mars atmospheric entry.[56] The EDL sequence commenced on 19 October 2016, with entry interface at about 120 km altitude, followed by aerodynamic deceleration via the heat shield peaking at over 1,500°C, parachute deployment at Mach 2, and backshell separation at around 1.5 km altitude.[57] However, an anomaly occurred when the inertial measurement unit (IMU) saturated, generating erroneous velocity data that the navigation software interpreted as an altitude of 1.8 km while the actual height was 40-50 meters, triggering premature thruster shutdown after only three seconds instead of the planned 7-10 seconds.[57] [48] This error, compounded by inadequate modeling of parachute detachment dynamics and software handling of conflicting sensor inputs, resulted in a hard impact at approximately 300 km/h, creating a 40-meter crater and scattering debris including the parachute and back shell.[58] Post-flight analysis confirmed partial success in entry and parachute phases, with telemetry received for 9 seconds post-impact before battery depletion, but the lander was destroyed on impact without achieving a soft landing.[57] The ESA inquiry highlighted root causes such as insufficient conservatism in simulations and IMU software vulnerabilities, informing design improvements for future missions despite the failure.[48]2016 Mission Outcomes and Data Yield
The ExoMars 2016 mission launched on March 14, 2016, from Baikonur Cosmodrome aboard a Proton-M rocket, with the Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) and Schiaparelli Entry, Descent, and Landing Demonstrator Module (EDM) separating en route to Mars.[59] Both components arrived at Mars on October 19, 2016, marking the partial success of the mission: while Schiaparelli failed to achieve a soft landing, TGO successfully entered an initial elliptical orbit and began its operational phases. The Schiaparelli EDM, intended to demonstrate entry, descent, and landing technologies for future missions, encountered a critical anomaly during its descent to Meridiani Planum.[60] Schiaparelli's descent commenced with atmospheric entry at approximately 21,000 km/h, followed by parachute deployment at 11 km altitude and heatshield separation. However, an erroneous saturation of the inertial measurement unit (IMU) during the parachute phase caused the onboard computer to miscalculate velocity and altitude, registering a false touchdown signal about 1.2 km above the surface. This triggered premature backshell and parachute separation, followed by overfiring of the retrorockets for roughly 3 seconds instead of the planned 25 seconds, leading to a high-velocity impact at around 180 m/s and subsequent tumbling destruction.[48] Despite the failure, Schiaparelli transmitted telemetry data during descent, including measurements of atmospheric density, wind speeds up to 100 m/s, and environmental parameters, totaling over 15,000 data packets relayed via Mars Express. These yielded insights into Mars' lower atmosphere but no surface operations or long-term science. The crash site was later imaged by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, confirming debris scatter over 1 km. In contrast, TGO achieved successful Mars orbit insertion on October 19, 2016, into a highly elliptical path, followed by an 11-month aerobraking campaign ending in April 2018, which circularized its orbit at 400 km altitude with a 74-degree inclination. Nominal science operations commenced thereafter, utilizing instruments such as NOMAD and ACS spectrometers for trace gas detection, CaSSIS for high-resolution imaging, and FREND for neutron spectroscopy. Key data yields include precise mapping of atmospheric water vapor distribution, seasonal ozone variations, and chlorine monoxide levels, enhancing models of Mars' hydrological cycle and photochemistry. TGO's observations have set stringent upper limits on methane concentrations (below 50 parts per trillion by volume globally), resolving prior sporadic detections by ground-based assets like Curiosity rover as localized or measurement artifacts rather than widespread plumes.[61][62] By 2025, TGO had completed multiple Martian years of data collection, contributing over 240,000 solar occultation measurements that detected no significant hydrocarbons and mapped seasonal nightside oxygen emissions indicative of atmospheric dynamics.[63] Surface reflectance data from CaSSIS revealed ice exposures and mineral distributions, while FREND subsurface hydrogen maps supported water ice inventories up to several meters deep in mid-latitudes.[64] These findings, integrated with missions like Mars Express, have advanced understanding of trace gas sinks, dust interactions, and potential habitability signals without confirming active biological sources.[65] The mission's longevity, extending beyond its planned five-year primary phase, underscores TGO's role as a cornerstone for Mars atmospheric science, despite the lander setback informing refined entry systems for the delayed Rosalind Franklin rover.[9]Rosalind Franklin Rover Mission
Rover Design and Instrumentation
The Rosalind Franklin rover, constructed by Airbus Defence and Space in Stevenage, United Kingdom, measures approximately 3.5 meters in length, 2 meters in width, and 2 meters in height, with a dry mass of 310 kilograms excluding the landing platform.[13] It employs a six-wheeled rocker-bogie mobility system derived from prior Mars rover designs, enabling traversal of rocky terrain at speeds up to 0.2 meters per second while maintaining stability on slopes up to 30 degrees.[11] Power is supplied by body-mounted solar arrays generating about 700 watts at landing, augmented by lithium-ion batteries for operations during dust storms or night, with a design life targeting at least 500 Martian sols.[11] A key feature is the 2-meter subsurface drill mounted on the rover's front, capable of extracting core samples from depths up to 2 meters to access regions less altered by surface radiation and oxidants, preserving potential organic material.[4] Samples are processed in an internal laboratory via a sample distribution system that crushes, sieves, and delivers portions to analytical instruments, prioritizing organic detection while minimizing contamination through hermetic seals and sterilization protocols.[66] The rover includes a 2-meter mast topped with the Panoramic Camera (PanCam) for high-resolution stereo imaging and multispectral analysis of the terrain, geology, and atmosphere.[66] The Pasteur payload comprises seven principal instruments focused on exobiology, geology, and mineralogy:- PanCam: Provides panoramic, 3D color imaging and spectroscopy for site characterization and navigation.[67]
- CLUPI (Close-Up Imager): Captures microscopic images of rock textures and potential biosignatures at centimeter-scale resolution.[67]
- WISDOM (Water Ice Subsurface Deposit Observation on Mars): Ground-penetrating radar operating at 100-500 MHz to map subsurface stratigraphy up to 3 meters deep.[67]
- MicrOmega-IR: Infrared hyperspectral microscope identifying mineral compositions in samples at micrometer resolution.[66]
- RLS (Raman Laser Spectrometer): Detects organic molecules and minerals via Raman spectroscopy on solid samples.[66]
- MOMA (Mars Organic Molecule Analyzer): Combines mass spectrometry and laser desorption to analyze complex organics in crushed samples.[66]
- ENFYS: Near-infrared spectrometer mounted on the mast, replacing the original Russian ISEM to measure surface mineralogy and hydration states from 1-2.5 micrometers.[68]