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water on the moon? nasa sez yes
Published November 13, 2009Views: 116
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WASHINGTON (AFP) – A "significant amount" of frozen water has been found on the moon, the US space agency said Friday heralding a major leap forward in space exploration and boosting hopes of a permanent lunar base.
Preliminary data from a moon probe "indicates the mission successfully uncovered water in a permanently shadowed lunar crater," NASA said in a statement.
"The discovery opens a new chapter in our understanding of the moon," it added, as ecstatic scientists celebrated the landmark discovery.
The data was found after NASA sent two spacecraft crashing into the lunar service last month in a dramatic experiment to probe Earth's nearest neighbor for water.
One rocket slammed into the Cabeus crater, near the lunar southern pole, at around 5,600 miles (9,000 kilometers) per hour.
The impact sent a huge plume of material billowing up from the bottom of the crater, which has not seen sunlight for billions of years.
The rocket was followed four minutes later by a spacecraft equipped with cameras to record the impact.
"We are ecstatic," said Anthony Colaprete, project scientist and principal investigator for the 79-million-dollar LCROSS mission.
"Multiple lines of evidence show water was present in both the high angle vapor plume and the ejecta curtain created by the LCROSS Centaur impact.
"The concentration and distribution of water and other substances requires further analysis, but it is safe to say Cabeus holds water," Colaprete said.
Scientists had previously theorized that, except for the possibility of ice at the bottom of craters, the moon was totally dry.
Finding water on Earth's natural satellite is a major breakthrough in space exploration.
"We're unlocking the mysteries of our nearest neighbor and, by extension, the solar system," said Michael Wargo, chief lunar scientist at NASA headquarters in Washington.
"The full understanding of the LCROSS data may take some time. The data is that rich," Colaprete cautioned.
"Along with the water in Cabeus, there are hints of other intriguing substances. The permanently shadowed regions of the moon are truly cold traps, collecting and preserving material over billions of years."
Only 12 men, all Americans, have ever walked on the moon, and the last to set foot there were in 1972, at the end of the Apollo missions.
But NASA's ambitious plans to put US astronauts back on the moon by 2020 to establish manned lunar bases for further exploration to Mars under the Constellation project are increasingly in doubt.
NASA's budget is currently too small to pay for Constellation's Orion capsule, a more advanced and spacious version of the Apollo lunar module, as well as the Ares I and Ares V launchers needed to put the craft in orbit.
A key review panel appointed by President Barack Obama said existing budgets are not large enough to fund a return mission before 2020. <<<
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Don't get too stirred up just yet. These findings will have to be peer-reviewed and also "significant" is just a word. There may be layers of ice, or it may be scattered in droplets throughout portions of the lunar soil. In any case, getting at it in any 'useful' way will be decades away . . .
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GOLO member since April 4, 2008
November 13, 2009 3:03 p.m.
GOLO member since May 15, 2009
November 13, 2009 2:32 p.m.
send the gitmo dudes there..let them figure it out
GOLO member since November 12, 2009
November 13, 2009 2:30 p.m.
GOLO member since July 7, 2007
November 13, 2009 2:17 p.m.
Rule 1 - DO NOT drink the yellow water!
Even with water present, if we were to set up permanent base stations, wouldn't there need to be some way for existing water to be recycled? With no atmosphere, and no rain, that would seem to be a big, expensive engineering problem.
GOLO member since January 25, 2008
November 13, 2009 2:15 p.m.
GOLO member since October 18, 2007
November 13, 2009 2:11 p.m.
GOLO member since July 7, 2007
November 13, 2009 2:10 p.m.
GOLO member since July 25, 2007
November 13, 2009 2:07 p.m.
GOLO member since March 27, 2009
November 13, 2009 1:57 p.m.
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