The Lunar Environment Heliophysics X-ray Imager (LEXI) Mission.
Brian M WalshK D KuntzS BuskT CameronD ChornayA ChuchraM R CollierC ConnorHyunju ConnorT E CravensN DobsonM GaleazziH KimJ KujawskiC K Paw UF S PorterV NaldozaR NutterR QudsiDavid G SibeckS SembayM ShoemakerK SimmsN E ThomasE AtzG WinkertPublished in: Space science reviews (2024)
The Lunar Environment heliospheric X-ray Imager (LEXI) is a wide field-of-view soft X-ray telescope developed to study solar wind-magnetosphere coupling. LEXI is part of the Blue Ghost 1 mission comprised of 10 payloads to be deployed on the lunar surface. LEXI monitors the dayside magnetopause position and shape as a function of time by observing soft X-rays (0.1-2 keV) emitted from solar wind charge-exchange between exospheric neutrals and high charge-state solar wind plasma in the dayside magnetosheath. Measurements of the shape and position of the magnetopause are used to test temporal models of meso- and macro-scale magnetic reconnection. To image the boundary, LEXI employs lobster-eye optics to focus X-rays to a microchannel plate detector with a 9.1 × ∘ 9.1 ∘ field of view.