Category Archives: The Moon

Video: New Universe Daily report on earth-like exoplanets and lunar mining

A report from New Universe Daily on earth-like exoplanets and on prospects for mining the Moon:

http://youtu.be/m6xxIkuY_Cs

The report references the article One step from Earth – physicsworld.com (req. free registration).

NASA lunar orbiter finds crater slopes facing pole contain more hydrogen

The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter finds that in craters on the southern hemisphere of the Moon, the slopes facing towards the south have more hydrogen embedded in them than the north facing slopes. The south facing slopes receive somewhat less light than the slopes facing north and so this presumably results in slightly less evaporation. The amount of hydrogen, which to some degree may be in water molecules, is still extremely small and would be very difficult to extract. (There is strong evidence that  some craters at the poles, whose floors never see any sunlight at all, have significant amounts of mine-able water ice.)

NASA’s LRO Discovers Lunar Hydrogen More Abundant
on Moon’s Pole-Facing Slopes

Space travel is difficult and expensive – it would cost thousands of dollars to launch a bottle of water to the moon. The recent discovery of hydrogen-bearing molecules, possibly including water, on the moon has explorers excited because these deposits could be mined if they are sufficiently abundant, sparing the considerable expense of bringing water from Earth. Lunar water could be used for drinking or its components – hydrogen and oxygen – could be used to manufacture important products on the surface that future visitors to the moon will need, like rocket fuel and breathable air.

hayn-crater-large_0_500x146

LRO image [Large version] of the moon’s Hayn Crater, located just northeast of Mare Humboldtianum, dramatically illuminated by the low Sun casting long shadows across the crater floor. Image Credit: NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University

Recent observations by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft indicate these deposits may be slightly more abundant on crater slopes in the southern hemisphere that face the lunar South Pole. “There’s an average of about 23 parts-per-million-by-weight (ppmw) more hydrogen on Pole-Facing Slopes (PFS) than on Equator-Facing Slopes (EFS),” said Timothy McClanahan of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

This is the first time a widespread geochemical difference in hydrogen abundance between PFS and EFS on the moon has been detected. It is equal to a one-percent difference in the neutron signal detected by LRO’s Lunar Exploration Neutron Detector (LEND) instrument. McClanahan is lead author of a paper about this research published online October 19 in the journal Icarus.

The hydrogen-bearing material is volatile (easily vaporized), and may be in the form of water molecules (two hydrogen atoms bound to an oxygen atom) or hydroxyl molecules (an oxygen bound to a hydrogen) that are loosely bound to the lunar surface. The cause of the discrepancy between PFS and EFS may be similar to how the Sun mobilizes or redistributes frozen water from warmer to colder places on the surface of the Earth, according to McClanahan.

“Here in the northern hemisphere, if you go outside on a sunny day after a snowfall, you’ll notice that there’s more snow on north-facing slopes because they lose water at slower rates than the more sunlit south-facing slopes” said McClanahan. “We think a similar phenomenon is happening with the volatiles on the moon – PFS don’t get as much sunlight as EFS, so this easily vaporized material stays longer and possibly accumulates to a greater extent on PFS.”

The team observed the greater hydrogen abundance on PFS in the topography of the moon’s southern hemisphere, beginning at between 50 and 60 degrees south latitude.  Slopes closer to the South Pole show a larger hydrogen concentration difference. Also, hydrogen was detected in greater concentrations on the larger PFS, about 45 ppmw near the poles. Spatially broader slopes provide more detectable signals than smaller slopes. The result indicates that PFS have greater hydrogen concentrations than their surrounding regions. Also, the LEND measurements over the larger EFS don’t contrast with their surrounding regions, which indicates EFS have hydrogen concentrations that are equal to their surroundings, according to McClanahan. The team thinks more hydrogen may be found on PFS in northern hemisphere craters as well, but they are still gathering and analyzing LEND data for this region.

There are different possible sources for the hydrogen on the moon. Comets and some asteroids contain large amounts of water, and impacts by these objects may bring hydrogen to the moon. Hydrogen-bearing molecules could also be created on the lunar surface by interaction with the solar wind. The solar wind is a thin stream of gas that’s constantly blown off the Sun. Most of it is hydrogen, and this hydrogen may interact with oxygen in silicate rock and dust on the moon to form hydroxyl and possibly water molecules. After these molecules arrive at the moon, it is thought they get energized by sunlight and then bounce across the lunar surface; and they get stuck, at least temporarily, in colder and more shadowy areas.

Since the 1960’s scientists thought that only in permanently shadowed areas in craters near the lunar poles was it cold enough to accumulate this volatile material, but recent observations by a number of spacecraft, including LRO, suggest that hydrogen on the moon is more widespread.

It’s uncertain if the hydrogen is abundant enough to economically mine. “The amounts we are detecting are still drier than the driest desert on Earth,” said McClanahan. However, the resolution of the LEND instrument is greater than the size of most PFS, so smaller PFS slopes, perhaps approaching yards in size, may have significantly higher abundances, and indications are that the greatest hydrogen concentrations are within the permanently shaded regions, according to McClanahan.

The team made the observations using LRO’s LEND instrument, which detects hydrogen by counting the number of subatomic particles called neutrons flying off the lunar surface. The neutrons are produced when the lunar surface gets bombarded by cosmic rays. Space is permeated by cosmic rays, which are high-speed particles produced by powerful events like flares on the Sun or exploding stars in deep space. Cosmic rays shatter atoms in material near the lunar surface, generating neutrons that bounce from atom to atom like a billiard ball. Some neutrons happen to bounce back into space where they can be counted by neutron detectors.

Neutrons from cosmic ray collisions have a wide range of speeds, and hydrogen atoms are most efficient at stopping neutrons in their medium speed range, called epithermal neutrons. Collisions with hydrogen atoms in the lunar regolith reduce the numbers of epithermal neutrons that fly into space. The more hydrogen present, the fewer epithermal neutrons the LEND detector will count.

The team interpreted a widespread decrease in the number of epithermal neutrons detected by LEND as a signal that hydrogen is present on PFS. They combined data from LEND with lunar topography and illumination maps derived from LRO’s LOLA instrument (Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter), and temperature maps from LRO’s Diviner instrument (Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment) to discover the greater hydrogen abundance and associated surface conditions on PFS.

In addition to seeing if the same pattern exists in the moon’s northern hemisphere, the team wants to see if the hydrogen abundance changes with the transition from day to night. If so, it would substantiate existing evidence of a very active production and cycling of hydrogen on the lunar surface, according to McClanahan.

The research was funded by NASA’s LRO mission. LEND was supplied by the Russian Federal Space Agency Roscosmos. Launched on June 18, 2009, LRO has collected a treasure trove of data with its seven powerful instruments, making an invaluable contribution to our knowledge about the moon. LRO is managed by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington.

Explore the Moon in 3D

Get out your red-blue glasses and check out this cool collection of 3D images of features on the Moon:  The Moon, In Depth – The Planetary Society.

The images were taken by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC). Find more 3D images if you go to LROC RDR Product Select and search on “anaglyph”.

For example:

20150119_moon_hellq3d_15_f840[1]Click for larger version.

Find out more about the LRO here.

ESA Video: 3D printing a lunar building

Here’s a video from ESA and the architectural firm Foster & Partners showing how a lunar structure could be built with a robotic rover  using a 3D printing

See also this earlier item: ESA: Building a lunar base with 3D printing.

‘To The Stars International Quarterly’ – January 2015 issue now available

The Moon Society and the National Space Society (NSS) offer the tenth issue of the To The Stars International Quarterly (pdf). The 170 page file is “loaded with space news, color photos, and interesting articles”.

In addition to the Moon Society and the NSS, contributing organizations include Space Renaissance Initiative,  The Mars Foundation,  Open Luna Foundation, and the Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS).

Here is the Table of Contents:

2 Co-sponsoring Organizations
NEWS SECTION pp. 3-119
3-26 Earth Orbit and Mission to Planet Earth
27-29 Space Tourism
30-48 Cislunar Space and the Moon
49-75 Mars
76-89 Asteroids & Comets
90-107 Other Planets & their moons
108-119 Starbound
ARTICLES, ESSAYS pp 120-160
120 Are we ever going to Settle the Moon? – Peter Kokh
A fresh look at the idea of “Spinning-up” Industries Needed on the Moon – Peter Kokh
122 Exports to Earth need to be greater in value than imports from Earth; The “MUS/cle.” Equation
123 Biospheric Technologies needed on the Moon – and on Earth – Peter Kokh
124 We Need More Good & Realistic Moon & Mars Outpost & Settlement Art – Peter Kokh
125 SHIELDING: “The Good, the Bad, the Ugly” > ”The Drab, the Nice, the Beautiful“- Peter Kokh
127 Fun Time About Names: “Sun” “Earth” “Moon” – Peter Kokh
128 Meeting the Threat of Orbital Debris Authors – Al Anzaldua and David Dunlop
151 From Power Beaming at the International Space Station to Tethered Balloons, Proposed Cubesats and a Growing Network of First Nations° Connected Organizations – Dave Dunlop,
158 The Emerging Lunar Reconvergence – Dave Dunlop
162 Online Op-Ed Articles from other writers worth reading
STUDENTS & TEACHERS pp 161-164
165 NASA Launches Student Contest for 3D-Printed Astronaut Tools
166 Contestant gets to name new ISS “Droid”;
167 PISCES to host winning mooniest team; The “Cities at Night Project” is asking for your help.
167 NASA Selects student teams for High Powered Rocket Challenge
169 Feature Articles and Essays in our sister publications: Ad Astra and Moon Miners’ Manifesto
ATTSIQ #10 page 1 JANUARY 2015

Previous TTSIQ issues are available at: www.moonsociety.org/international/ttsiq/ and at: www.nss.org/tothestars/.