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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Returning to the Moon

New technologies on NASA's next lunar spacecraft will collect information to make human exploration safer.

By Brittany Sauser

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Moonbound: The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (above) will orbit and survey the Moon, providing greater detail about its surface and environment than any previous satellite has. One of two new instruments onboard the spacecraft will be the lunar orbiter laser altimeter (bottom), which will send out five laser beams 28 times per second to map the surface of the moon. Very short pulses of laser light are emitted through the narrow silver cone attached to the instrument’s optical assembly (gold-colored box). The large cone collects the laser light that is reflected back from the lunar surface.
Credit: NASA

NASA's next lunar orbiter will launch later this year, the first step in an ambitious plan to return humans to the Moon--and send them on to Mars. The spacecraft, called the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), will use new technology to make precise maps of the Moon's surface, to search for resources such as ice, and to assess the threat that radiation in the environment could pose for humans.

LRO is the most advanced lunar satellite NASA has built, says Richard Vondrak, the project scientist for LRO, who adds that it will provide information that would have been impossible to collect a few decades ago. "We are surveying the Moon in more detail than any other celestial body for the benefit of all countries, including China, Japan, and India, who have said they have ambitions to put people on the Moon in the next 10 to 20 years," adds David Smith, a NASA scientist working on LRO.

LRO is part of NASA's Vision for Space Exploration, a program intended to, among other things, answer fundamental questions of physics, search for extraterrestrial life, and seek new resources, such as power sources, for Earth. The program calls for humans to return to the Moon. But before that happens, says Vondrak, it's necessary to understand much more about the Moon's surface radiation and topography.

"During Apollo, there were a number of near-fatal mistakes," says Smith. "We did not land on a flat surface, and there were boulders everywhere, which could have damaged the vehicle and prevented a return to Earth. Safety standards today would not have allowed Apollo."

The Apollo manned-spacecraft program shut down in 1975, and it was not until the 1990s that the United States sent more satellites to orbit the Moon--Clementine and the Lunar Prospector, which spent months orbiting the Moon and sending back data. Clementine was a joint project between the U.S. Department of Defense and NASA that also tested new ballistic technologies; the U.S. has launched no other lunar probes since.

LRO will collect more data with greater precision so that scientists can find safe and resource-rich landing sites and design systems appropriate for the lunar environment, says Vondrak.

LRO will orbit the Moon for one year at an altitude of 50 kilometers. Previous U.S. satellites maintained an altitude of approximately 100 to 200 kilometers, as have those sent by other countries, like China's Chang'e 1 and Japan's Kaguya, both launched in 2007. Orbiting at a lower altitude allows the spacecraft to get a closer view of the Moon, enabling the craft to obtain higher-resolution images, very detailed maps, and more-accurate temperature measurements, says Vondrak.

The lunar orbiter is equipped with six novel instruments, two of which will be making their space debuts: a cosmic-ray telescope, which will measure the effects that lunar radiation would have on humans, and a laser altimeter, which will make maps of the surface of the Moon.

The cosmic-ray telescope, called Crater, is a new kind of sensor developed by MIT, Boston University, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, and the Aerospace Corporation. It can measure the radiation environment, not just in space, but also as it would be experienced by astronauts on the surface on a day-to-day basis. "By characterizing the radiation, we can build better shielding on spacecraft so that astronauts can survive long trips to the Moon and Mars," says Justin Kasper, a staff astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and the project scientist for Crater.

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Comments

  • >>> LRO will succeed but not sure VSE can >>>
    Gaetano Marano on 05/13/2008 at 8:56 AM
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    LRO will be a success (mainly since it needs a small and ready available rocket to launch) and will give very good scientific results (but, unfortunately, not images with a resolution enough high to see the Apollo LMs) ---- not sure the VSE will be a same success also (or, at least, not soon) since (as you can read in my articles on http://www.ghostnasa.com/ ) both Ares-1 and Ares-5 are UNDERPOWERED ( http://www.ghostnasa.com/posts/012arescantfly.html ) the Orion's tower-LAS is too big and heavy ( http://www.ghostnasa.com/posts/029eiffeltowerlas.html ) so, the Orion is OVERWEIGHTED and need to scrap the airbags LAND landing option ( http://www.ghostnasa.com/posts/028orionlanding.html ) then, assuming the Ares-1 vibrations problems ( http://www.ghostnasa.com/posts/022novibrations.html ) will be solved, the first orbital manned Orion flight should happen in 2016 (or one-two years later, if the solution to the Ares-1 vibrations will need a couple of extra test-launches) while, the first (new) manned lunar mission, may slip to 2022 or LATER (when, probably, Russia, China, Europe, India and new.space companies already will be on the Moon...) and will be accomplished with a bad and  small Altair ( http://www.ghostnasa.com/posts/025badaltair.html ) ----  http://www.newspaceagency.com/
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • Finally !!!!
    camdaddy09 on 05/13/2008 at 1:44 PM
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    Rate this comment: 12345
  • Its nice sharing
    christinadxb on 05/20/2008 at 8:16 AM
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    1
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    Well its nice sharing, i found it much informative, keep it up... also visit www.gobestarticles.com for huge web resources
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: Its nice sharing
      dutch on 06/21/2008 at 8:12 AM
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      Intresting.. Read up on the Hopi Indian prophecy.

      Another Hopi prophecy warns that nothing should be brought back from the Moon. It this was done, the Hopi warned, the balance of natural and universal laws and forces would be disturbed, resulting in earthquakes, severe changes in weather patterns, and social unrest.

      (are they refering to He3 mining and fusion technology?)

      Hopi prophecy states that World War III will be started by the people who first received the Light -- China, Palestine, India and Africa. When the war comes, the United States will be destroyed by "gourds of ashes" which will fall to the ground, boiling the rivers and burning the earth, where no grass will grow for many years, and causing a disease that no medicine can cure.
      Rate this comment: 12345
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