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Sample return of interstellar matter (SARIM)
Authors:Ralf Srama  Thomas Stephan  Eberhard Grün  Norbert Pailer  Anton Kearsley  Amara Graps  Rene Laufer  Pascale Ehrenfreund  Nicolas Altobelli  Kathrin Altwegg  Siegfried Auer  Jack Baggaley  Mark J Burchell  James Carpenter  Luigi Colangeli  Francesca Esposito  Simon F Green  Hartmut Henkel  Mihaly Horanyi  Annette Jäckel  Sascha Kempf  Neil McBride  Georg Moragas-Klostermeyer  Harald Krüger  Pasquale Palumbo  Andre Srowig  Mario Trieloff  Peter Tsou  Zoltan Sternovsky  Oliver Zeile  Hans-Peter Röser
Institution:1. Max-Planck-Institute Nuclear Physics, Heidelberg, Germany
2. IRS, University Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany
3. University of Chicago, Chicago, USA
4. LASP, University Colorado, Boulder, USA
5. Astrium GmbH, Friedrichshafen, Germany
6. Natural History Museum, London, U.K.
7. INAF-IFSI, Roma, Italy
8. University Leiden, Leiden, The Netherlands
9. JPL, Pasadena, USA
10. University Bern, Bern, Switzerland
11. A&M Associates, Basye, V.A., USA
12. University Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand
13. University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent, UK
14. University Leicester, Leicester, U.K.
15. INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Capodimonte, Napoli, Italy
16. Open University, Milton Keynes, U.K.
17. von Hoerner & Sulger GmbH, Schwetzingen, Germany
18. University Braunschweig, Braunschweig, Germany
19. MPS, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany
22. University Parthenope, Napoli, Italy
20. KIP, Heidelberg, Germany
21. University Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
Abstract:The scientific community has expressed strong interest to re-fly Stardust-like missions with improved instrumentation. We propose a new mission concept, SARIM, that collects interstellar and interplanetary dust particles and returns them to Earth. SARIM is optimised for the collection and discrimination of interstellar dust grains. Improved active dust collectors on-board allow us to perform in-situ determination of individual dust impacts and their impact location. This will provide important constraints for subsequent laboratory analysis. The SARIM spacecraft will be placed at the L2 libration point of the Sun–Earth system, outside the Earth’s debris belts and inside the solar-wind charging environment. SARIM is three-axes stabilised and collects interstellar grains between July and October when the relative encounter speeds with interstellar dust grains are lowest (4 to 20 km/s). During a 3-year dust collection period several hundred interstellar and several thousand interplanetary grains will be collected by a total sensitive area of 1 m2. At the end of the collection phase seven collector modules are stored and sealed in a MIRKA-type sample return capsule. SARIM will return the capsule containing the stardust to Earth to allow for an extraction and investigation of interstellar samples by latest laboratory technologies.
Keywords:Interstellar dust  Interplanetary dust  Collection  Interstellar medium  Dust collector  Sample return  Chemical composition
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