29 Feb 2008
Nasa is planning to smash a spacecraft into the south pole of the Moon in order to discover whether there is water at the location.
The US space agency will launch two satellites in October, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and the Lunar Crater and Observation Sensing Satellite (LCROSS).
LCROSS will go on a three-month journey until it is over the south pole of
the Moon.
In February 2009 the $709m LCROSS will separate into two units, the larger of
which will be shot at the surface at high speed. Once it strikes, the second
satellite will scan the debris cloud before flying through it to analyse the
results.
"This payload delivery represents a new way of doing business for Nasa," said Daniel Andrews, LCROSS project manager at Nasa's Ames Research Center.
"LCROSS primarily is using commercial off-the-shelf instruments to meet the mission's accelerated development schedule and cost restraints."
Nasa is hoping to find evidence of hydrogen in the plume, which would indicate that water could be present. This would be a major help in Nasa's plans to set up a permanent Moon base.
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Do you agree?
Here we go again!
Geez, not content with screwing up the planet we live on we are going to start throwing damned expensive "rocks" at the surface of the moon. Isn't it ashame that the lasting legacy where ever 'Mankind' goes is a huge junk pile. Came on NASA, can't you be a little more intelligent than this?
Posted by: Jack Monteray 04 Mar 2008
Ooops!
Sir? Yes? We vaporized ALL the water with our experiment. Oh.
Posted by: Daniel Ingle 03 Mar 2008
What?
Great -- we'll find out there IS water on the moon, but that it's been poisoned by the plutonium power source on the probe.
Posted by: Alan Carter 02 Mar 2008