Teledyne Technologies Incorporated (NYSE:TDY) announced today that its
subsidiary, Teledyne Scientific & Imaging, LLC ("TS&I”) has played a key
role in helping NASA begin a new era in planetary exploration, when the
Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) commenced operation in November.
The M3 is one of 11 instruments on the Chandrayaan-1
spacecraft, India’s first mission to the moon.
The enabling technology that makes the M3 possible is a new
type of combined visible-infrared image array developed by the Teledyne
Imaging Sensors group at TS&I. The sensor array is produced using a
mixture of three elements – mercury, cadmium and tellurium – to grow
crystals that are very sensitive to light. The crystal structure, which
is called MCT, is grown precisely one atomic layer at a time in a vacuum
chamber through the Molecular Beam Epitaxy process. For the past two
decades, Teledyne’s MCT detectors have been used for infrared sensors in
several space missions, including NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and the
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. What makes the image sensor in M3
different from earlier generations of infrared arrays is that special
processing has been used to make the sensor be able to see both visible
and infrared light. This new type of detector technology, called
"substrate-removed MCT,” is very sensitive, detecting about 80% of the
incident light in visible and infrared bands.
During the next two years, the M3 is designed to image the
entire lunar surface with unprecedented spatial and spectral resolution.
The M3 is an "imaging spectrometer” that simultaneously takes
images in 261 colors, from the blue end of visible light (430 nm)
through near infrared wavelengths (3,000 nm). Comparison of the
brightness in each narrow color band will enable scientists to determine
the composition and mineralogy of the entire lunar surface with spatial
resolution about equal to the size of a football field.
"The M3 has the first substrate-removed MCT detector
operating in space,” said James Beletic, Director of Astronomy & Civil
Space at Teledyne Imaging Sensors. "Substrate-removed MCT is opening a
new era in space astronomy and planetary science. This new type of
visible-infrared sensor will be used in many future NASA missions,
including the Hubble Space Telescope, the James Webb Space Telescope,
and next generation Earth observation satellites.”
For more information, a companion press release from JPL can be found at http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2008-239.
Led for NASA by principal investigator Carle Pieters of Brown
University, the Moon Mineralogy Mapper was designed and built by NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Teledyne Technologies is a leading provider of sophisticated electronic
subsystems, instrumentation and communication products, engineered
systems, aerospace engines, and energy and power generation systems.
Teledyne Technologies’ operations are primarily located in the United
States, the United Kingdom and Mexico. For more information, visit
Teledyne Technologies’ website at www.teledyne.com.