- University of Oxford, Physics, Oxford, United Kingdom of Great Britain – England, Scotland, Wales (fiona.henderson@physics.ox.ac.uk)
Hydration on the Moon’s surface is widely detected in orbital datasets (e.g. M3 on Chandrayan-1), yet its abundance and physical form (-OH, H2O, frost, and/or ice) remain poorly constrained. The lunar surface is covered in regolith fines, which impacts local thermophysical conditions, obscures underlying volatiles and modifies detectable hydration bands. Our interpretation of hydration form and abundance on the lunar surface is further limited by existing experimental constraints of water-ice spectral behaviour at the regolith interface (photometric effects) and by the restriction of current orbital datasets to the near-infrared (< ~3 µm O–H stretching mode). We are developing a laboratory approach to quantify how dust layering, regolith maturity, grain size, composition, and ice abundance control the spectral expression of water-ice across the near- and mid-infrared (1.8–20 µm), with emphasis on the ~3 and 6 µm diagnostic regions. This poster presents a preliminary experimental set-up developed ahead of the full operation of a custom-built vacuum chamber, Polar Analogue of Dust Overlying Regolith–Ice (PANDOR-I), intended to simulate airless-body and cryogenic polar conditions. In this initial laboratory set-up, the sample compartment of a Bruker 70V Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectrometer is isolated using potassium bromide (KBr) windows to enable controlled, low-pressure (~0.2 mbar) reflectance measurements of anhydrous and hydrated analogue configurations to (i) characterise the spectral expression of hydration-related structure in the ~3 and 6 µm regions under regolith simulant fines, and (ii) provide benchmark spectra for direct comparison with a Mie–Hapke forward model (band shape,depth, and mixing trends) prior to cryogenic and airless body simulations with PANDOR-I. This preliminary work will establish an empirical reference for model validation and for designing the subsequent PANDOR-I cryogenic experiments, enabling a more robust interpretation of spectrally mixed hydration signatures in forthcoming lunar datasets.
How to cite: Henderson, F., Bowles, N., Shirley, K., Habib, N., and Eshbaugh, H.: PANDOR-I: Preliminary vacuum chamber experimental set-up of dust layering, ice-regolith lunar analogues in reflectance (1.8 – 20 µm), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12755, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12755, 2026.