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TOPOGRAPHIC MAPPING OF THE MOON
M.T. Zuber
Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA 02139-4307
USA
D.E. Smith
Laboratory for Terrestrial Physics
Code 920
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, MD 20771
USA
Commision IV, Working Group 5
KEY WORDS: DEM/DTM, extraterrestrial, mapping, electro-optical
ABSTRACT
We have processed laser altimetric data from the Clementine LIDAR to produce an accurate global model for the shape of
the Moon. Ranges from the spacecraft to the lunar surface were converted to center of mass-referenced radii and expanded
into a 72nd degree and order spherical harmonic model for lunar topography. Results show that the present shape of the
Moon is a sphere with maximum positive and negative deviat
Korolev and South Pole-Aitken basins. The near side has a gent
ions of ~8 km, both occurring on the far in the areas of the
le topography with an rms deviation of only about 1.4 km with
respect to the best-fit sphere compared to the far side. The shapes of the histograms of the deviations from the sphere show
a peaked distribution slightly skewed toward lower values for the near side, while the far side is broader but shows the South
Pole-Aitken Basin as an anomaly compared to the rest of the hemisphere. Where Apollo and Clementine altimetry coverage
overlap, measured relative topographic heights generally agree to within ~ 200 m, with most of the difference due to our more
accurate orbit corrections for Clementine and to variations in large-scale urface roughness.
1 BACKGROUND
1.1 The Clementine Mission
The Clementine Mission, sponsored by the Ballistic Missile
Defense Organization with science activities supported by
NASA, mapped the Moon from February 19 through May
3, 1994 (Nozette et al. 1994). The spacecraft included a
Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR) instrument that was
built by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (Nozette et
al. 1994). While the spacecraft was in orbit, this instrument
was operated as a ranging device and collected near-globally
distributed profiles of elevation round the Moon (Zuber et al.
1994). In this paper we discuss how data from the lemen-
tine LIDAR were processed to yield a global, geodetically-
referenced model for the topography of the Moon.
1.2 Pre-Clementine Measurements of Lunar Topogra-
phy
Measurements of lunar elevation have been derived from
Earth-based and orbital observations. Earth-based measure-
ments of lunar topography have necessarily been limited
to the near side, and include limb profiles (Watts 1963),
ground-based photogrammetry (Baldwin 1963; Hopmann
1967; Arthur and Bates 1968; Mills and Sudbury 1968) and
radar interferometry (Zisk 1971; Zisk 1972). These studies
yielded information of limited spatial distribution and posi-
tional knowledge of order 500 m.
Orbital data include landmark tracking by the Apollo com-
mand and service modules (Wollenhaupt et al. 1972), profil-
ing by the Apollo long wavelength radar sounder (Brown et
al. 1974), limb profiles from the Zond-6 orbiter (Rodionov
et al. 1971) and photogrammetry from the Lunar Orbiters
(Jones 1973). None of these observations was selenodeti-
cally referenced to the Moons center-of-mass, and all were
characterized by absolute errors on the order of 500 m.
More accurate lunar shape information was derived from or-
bital laser ranging. The Apollo 15, 16 and 17 missions carried
laser altimeters which provided measurements of the height
of the command modules above the lunar surface (Kaula et
al. 1972: Kaula et al. 1973; Kaula et al. 1974). These
measurements provided the first information on the shape of
the Moon in a center of mass reference frame.
2 LUNAR TOPOGRAPHIC MODEL
2.1 Measuring Lunar Topography
The Clementine LIDAR measured the slant range of the
spacecraft to the lunar surface at spacecraft altitudes of 640
km or less. The instrument collected data for approximately
one-half hour per 5-hour orbit for the two month lunar map-
ping mission. Specifications for the instrument are given in
Table 1. For the first month, with spacecraft periselene at
latitude —30?, topographic profiles were obtained in the ap-
proximate latitude range —79° to +22°, while in the sec-
ond month of mapping, with spacecraft periselene at latitude
+30°, profiles were obtained in the approximate range —20°
to +81°.
To produce a global topographic dataset from the lidar sys-
tem it was first necessary to subtract from the range profiles
a precise orbit. We computed these orbits with the GEO-
DYN/SOLVE orbital analysis programs (Putney 1977; Mc-
Carthy et al. 1994). We interpolated the spacecraft orbital
trajectory to the time of the laser measurement, and then ac-
1011
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B4. Vienna 1996