Modeling the Expected Performance of the REgolith X-ray Imaging Spectrometer (REXIS)
Niraj K. Inamdar, Richard P. Binzel, Jae Sub Hong, Branden Allen,, Jonathan Grindlay, Rebecca A. Masterson

TL;DR
This paper models the expected performance of REXIS, an X-ray spectrometer on OSIRIS-REx, to determine how various factors influence its ability to analyze Bennu's surface composition.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model to predict REXIS's performance considering multiple variables affecting X-ray spectral measurements.
Findings
Model bounds on REXIS's compositional measurement accuracy
Assessment of factors influencing spectral data quality
Predictions of Bennu's surface classification accuracy
Abstract
OSIRIS-REx is the third spacecraft in the NASA New Frontiers Program and is planned for launch in 2016. OSIRIS-REx will orbit the near-Earth asteroid (101955) Bennu, characterize it, and return a sample of the asteroid's regolith back to Earth. The Regolith X-ray Imaging Spectrometer (REXIS) is an instrument on OSIRIS-REx designed and built by students at MIT and Harvard. The purpose of REXIS is to collect and image sun-induced fluorescent X-rays emitted by Bennu, thereby providing spectroscopic information related to the elemental makeup of the asteroid regolith and the distribution of features over its surface. Telescopic reflectance spectra suggest a CI or CM chondrite analog meteorite class for Bennu, where this primitive nature strongly motivates its study. A number of factors, however, will influence the generation, measurement, and interpretation of the X-ray spectra measured by…
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