Moon Flight to Seek Life-Supporting Water
Posted on: Tuesday, 11 April 2006, 18:00 CDT
Moon dust and its potential to support life are at the heart of the 2008 mission for the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, NASA officials said Monday in California.
Officials with the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration said the 2008 flight over the moon's north and south poles would take pictures to create detailed maps for potential manned landings and bases in the distant future.
The highlight of the flight will be a two-part craft, called the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, that will slam into the moon's south pole.
The first impact is expected to send some 2.2 million tons of pulverized rock and dust 30-40 miles above the surface. A second, smaller crater also will be created.
The resulting analysis is aimed at determining whether the moon has life-supporting water and hydrogen, said Anthony Colaprete of the Ames Research Center, Mountain View, Calif.
We still don't know what form the hydrogen exists in, and we don't really know whether there's water at all, Colaprete told the San Francisco Chronicle.
Source: United Press International
Related Articles
- A Moon Illusion Onboard the ISS
- Chaos Theory Explains Origin of New Moons
- Jupiter is the King of Moons
- Galileo Discovers Space Rocks Near Jupiter's Moon Amalthea
- India Debates Plan to Send an Astronaut to the Moon
- Europe Unveils New Moon-Orbiting Craft
- China Planning New Rocket for Moon Mission
- Europe Set to Take On the Moon
- China to Launch Moon Mission in 2005
- Laurence Moon Syndrome
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds