Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter: Experiment summary after the first year of global mapping of Mars
2001
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
The Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA), an instrument on the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft, has measured the topography, surface roughness, and 1.064-mum reflectivity of Mars and the heights of volatile and dust clouds. This paper discusses the function of the MOLA instrument and the acquisition, processing, and correction of observations to produce global data sets. The altimeter measurements have been converted to both gridded and spherical harmonic models for the topography and shape of Mars that have vertical and radial accuracies of similar to1 m with respect to the planet's center of mass. The current global topographic grid has a resolution of 1/64 degrees in latitude x 1/32 degrees in longitude (I x 2 km(2) at the equator). Reconstruction of the locations of incident laser pulses on the Martian surface appears to be at the 100-m spatial accuracy level and results in 2 orders of magnitude improvement in the global geodetic grid of Mars. Global maps of optical pulse width indicative of 100-m-scale surface roughness and 1.064-mum reflectivity with an accuracy of 5% have also been obtained.