| Lunar Probe Finds Water on the Moon | | Print | |
| Written by James Heiser | ||||||||
| Thursday, 24 September 2009 18:15 | ||||||||
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NASA scientists have discovered water molecules in the polar regions of the Moon. Instruments aboard three separate spacecraft revealed water molecules in amounts that are greater than predicted, but still relatively small. Hydroxyl, a molecule consisting of one oxygen atom and one hydrogen atom, also was found in the lunar soil. The findings were published in Thursday's edition of the journal Science. The observations were made by NASA's Moon Mineralogy Mapper, or M3 ("M-cubed"), aboard the Indian Space Research Organization's Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft. NASA's Cassini spacecraft and NASA's Epoxi spacecraft have confirmed the find.... For additional confirmation, scientists turned to the Epoxi mission while it was flying past the Moon in June 2009 on its way to a November 2010 encounter with comet Hartley 2. The spacecraft not only confirmed the VIMS and M3 findings, but also expanded on them. "With our extended spectral range and views over the north pole, we were able to explore the distribution of both water and hydroxyl as a function of temperature, latitude, composition, and time of day," said Jessica Sunshine of the University of Maryland. Sunshine is Epoxi's deputy principal investigator and a scientist on the M3 team. "Our analysis unequivocally confirms the presence of these molecules on the Moon's surface and reveals that the entire surface appears to be hydrated during at least some portion of the lunar day." From the perspective of a water-rich world such as Earth, water is still a vanishingly-rare commodity on the Moon; preliminary estimates are that water may make up 1,000 parts-per-million in the lunar soil. According to Roger Clark, a U.S. Geological Survey scientist who is a member of the M3 team: "To put that into perspective, if you harvested one ton of the top layer of the Moon's surface, you could get as much as 32 ounces of water." This means that the wettest places on the Moon are astoundingly dry; by way of comparison, if there were concrete on the Moon, explorers would want to mine it for the water.
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Bonnie
said:
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Prediction Humans are going to go to the moon, destroy the landscape and terrain by strip mining for water to produce oxygen and hydrogen for an atmosphere, breathe that atmosphere and produce carbon dioxide. Next comes lunar warming, causing the remaining lunar ice to melt and evaporate in to space. It will be the end of the moon as we know it. |
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SRD-BCCM
said:
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Water on Moon-Not True If true this finding would violate the laws of physics and physical chemistry coupled with planetary dynamics and planetary science as we know and understand them. A few molecules of hydroxyl does not add up to water. http://www.bccmeteorites.com/misconduct-planetary.html |
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