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Laboratory Analysis of Returned Samples (LARS) | |
The ROSES 2018 Laboratory Analysis of Returned Samples (LARS) Program Appendix C.18 | |
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This Program Element takes proposals via a two-step proposal submission process described in Section 2 of Appendix C.1 The Planetary Science Division Research Program Overview. Mandatory Step-1 proposals are due April 26, 2018, and Step-2 proposals are due June 28, 2018. | |
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The goal of the Laboratory Analysis of Returned Samples (LARS) Program is to maximize the science derived from planetary sample-return missions. Activities supported by LARS fall into two categories: (1) development of laboratory instrumentation and/or advanced techniques required for the analysis of returned samples; (2) direct analysis of samples already returned to Earth. | |
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All proposed work must be in support of the overarching goals of the Planetary Science Research Program to help ascertain the content, origin, and evolution of the Solar System and the potential for life elsewhere, consistent with the strategy for Planetary Science Exploration embodied in the 2014 NASA Science Plan. | |
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Critical Dates | ||
Step 1 Proposal Due Date | Data included in PDS by | Step 2 Proposal Due Date |
04/26/18 | 05/29/18 | 06/28/18 |
Proposals to Develop Laboratory Instrumentation or Advanced Techniques are solicited to develop new analytical instrumentation or combinations of analytical instruments, or new components of analytical instruments, leading to significant improvements in the precision, resolution, or sensitivity of measurements compared to the existing state of the art, and to enable new types of measurements. Also of interest are proposals for the development of new analytical techniques for existing instrumentation that will push the limits of current technology. | ||
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Proposals to Analyze Returned Samples are solicited to conduct analytical studies of astromaterials already returned by planetary missions. | ||
The following completed missions have returned samples, and may be the targets of either Instrument/Method Development or Sample Analysis proposals to LARS: | ||
Mission | Links for More Information | |
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Genesis | The Genesis Mission Page | |
  | The Genesis Curation Website | |
Stardust | Stardust at Home (UC Berkeley) | |
  | The Stardust Mission Page | |
  | The Stardust Curator's Website | |
Hayabusa1 | The Hayabusa Sample Library | |
  | The Hayabusa Curation Website | |
LARS also supports Method/Instrumentation Development proposals to prepare for future sample-return missions. Highest priority will be given to proposals addressing missions already selected for flight and to those which can best demonstrate the timeliness of the effort. These include: | ||
Mission | Links for More Information | |
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OSIRIS-REx | The OSIRIS-REx Mission Page | |
Hayabusa2 | The Hayabusa2 Project Page | |
LARS does not support work principally relevant to past lunar sample-return missions, work to study returned space-flown hardware that has been exposed to micrometeorite impacts, unless associated with one of the missions listed in Appendix C18, Section 2.1 , research on astromaterials collected on Earth (e.g., meteorites, micrometeorites, cosmic dust) unless these analyses are directly in support of the interpretation of sample-return mission data, or efforts to develop instruments for flight on planetary missions. | |
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Proposals to this Program Element must follow the rules for use of mission data given in Appendix C.1 The Planetary Science Division Research Program Overview, Section 3.4. | |
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Proposals submitted to this Program Element must include a Data Management Plan (see Appendix C.1, Section 3.6). The Individual Proposer's Archive Guide (IPAG) is available on the PPI website. |
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