The Gamma Ray Spectrometer (GRS) is a gamma-ray spectrometer on the 2001 Mars Odyssey spacecraft, a space probe orbiting the planet Mars since 2001. Part of NASA's Mars Surveyor 2001 program, it returns geological data about Mars's surface such as identifying elements and the location of water. It is maintained by the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory at the University of Arizona in the United States. This instrument has mapped the distribution surface hydrogen, thought to trace water in the surface layer of Martian soil.[1]
The Gamma Ray Spectrometer weighs 30.5kg (67.2lb) and uses 32 watts of power. Along with its cooler, it measures 468by. The detector is a photodiode made of a 1.2kg (02.6lb) germanium crystal, reverse biased to about 3 kilovolts, mounted at the end of a 6m (20feet) boom to minimize interferences from the gamma radiation produced by the spacecraft itself. Its spatial resolution is about 300km (200miles).[2] [3]
The neutron spectrometer is 173by.
The high-energy neutron detector measures 303by. The instrument's central electronics box is 281by.