Outgassing is a challenge to creating and maintaining clean high-
vacuum environments.
NASA and
ESA maintain lists of materials with low-outgassing properties suitable for use in
spacecraft, as outgassing products can condense onto optical elements,
thermal radiators, or
solar cells and obscure them. Materials not normally considered absorbent can release enough lightweight
molecules to interfere with industrial or scientific vacuum processes.
Moisture,
sealants,
lubricants, and
adhesives are the most common sources, but even
metals and
glasses can release gases from cracks or impurities. The rate of outgassing increases at higher
temperatures because the
vapor pressure and rate of chemical reaction increases. For most solid materials, the method of manufacture and preparation can reduce the level of outgassing significantly. Cleaning of surfaces, or heating of individual components or the entire assembly (a process called "
bake-out") can drive off
volatiles. NASA's
Stardust space probe suffered reduced image quality due to an unknown contaminant that had condensed on the
CCD sensor of the navigation camera. A similar problem affected the
Cassini space probe's Narrow Angle Camera, but was corrected by repeatedly heating the system to 4 °C. A comprehensive characterisation of outgassing effects using
mass spectrometers could be obtained for ESA's
Rosetta spacecraft. Natural outgassing is commonplace in
comets. ==From rock==