@article{99e85fc7be464854b3e876edd28cda6e,
title = "Solar wind reflection from the lunar surface: The view from far and near",
abstract = "The Moon appears bright in the sky as a source of energetic neutral atoms (ENAs). These ENAs have recently been imaged over a broad energy range both from near the lunar surface, by India's Chandrayaan-1 mission (CH-1), and from a much more distant Earth orbit by NASA's Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) satellite. Both sets of observations have indicated that a relatively large fraction of the solar wind is reflected from the Moon as energetic neutral hydrogen. CH-1's angular resolution over different viewing angles of the lunar surface has enabled measurement of the emission as a function of angle. IBEX in contrast views not just a swath but a whole quadrant of the Moon as effectively a single pixel, as it subtends even at the closest approach no more than a few degrees on the sky. Here we use the scattering function measured by CH-1 to model global lunar ENA emission and combine these with IBEX observations. The deduced global reflection is modestly larger (by a factor of 1.25) when the angular scattering function is included. This provides a slightly updated IBEX estimate of AH=0.11±0.06 for the global neutralized albedo, which is ∼25\% larger than the previous values of 0.09±0.05, based on an assumed uniform scattering distribution.",
keywords = "ENAs, IBEX, Moon",
author = "L. Saul and P. Wurz and A. Vorburger and \{Rodr{\'i}guez M.\}, \{D. F.\} and Fuselier, \{S. A.\} and McComas, \{D. J.\} and E. M{\"o}bius and S. Barabash and Herb Funsten and Paul Janzen",
year = "2013",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1016/j.pss.2013.02.004",
language = "English",
volume = "84",
pages = "1--4",
journal = "Planetary and Space Science",
issn = "0032-0633",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",
}