A Renaissance in Lunar Science

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alexblackwell

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Donald Savage/Gretchen Cook-Anderson <br />Headquarters, Washington Dec. 22, 2004 <br />(Phone: 202/358-1727/0836)<br /><br />RELEASE: 04-407<br /><br />NASA SELECTS INVESTIGATIONS FOR LUNAR RECONNAISSANCE ORBITER<br /><br />NASA has selected six proposals to provide instrumentation and associated exploration/science measurement investigations for the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), the first spacecraft to be built as part of the Vision for Space Exploration.<br /><br />The LRO mission is scheduled to launch in the fall of 2008 as part of NASA's Robotic Lunar Exploration Program. The mission will deliver a powerful orbiter to the vicinity of the moon to obtain measurements necessary to characterize future robotic and human landing sites. It also will identify potential lunar resources and document aspects of the lunar radiation environment relevant to human biological responses.<br /><br />Proposals were submitted to NASA in response to an Announcement of Opportunity released in June 2004. Instrumentation provided by these selected measurement investigations will be the payload of the mission scheduled to launch in October 2008.<br /><br />"The payload we have selected for LRO builds on our collective experience in remote sensing of the Earth and Mars," said NASA's Deputy Associate Administrator for the Science Mission Directorate, Dr. Ghassem Asrar. "The measurements obtained by these instruments will characterize in unprecedented ways the moon's surface and environment for return of humans in the next decade," he added.<br /><br />"LRO will deliver measurements that will be critical to the key decisions we must make before the end of this decade," said NASA's Associate Administrator for the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate, Craig Steidle. "We are extremely excited by this innovative payload, and we are confident it will fulfill our expectations and support the Vision for Space Exploration," Steidle added.<br /><br />"The instruments selected for LRO represent an ideal ex
 
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alexblackwell

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Sorry for repeating this post, which was posted originally in a separate thread, but for I'll place it here as this thread will last longer, at least if I have anything to say about it ;-)<br /><br />====================================================================================<br /><br /><b>Cosmochemistry and Human Exploration</b><br /><br />--- Cosmochemistry plays an important role in developing local resources on the Moon and Mars, essential to sustained human presence in space. <br /><br /><i><b>Written by G. Jeffrey Taylor</b></i><br />Hawai'i Institute of Geophysics and Planetology<br />posted December 23, 2004
 
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alexblackwell

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Published online today in <i>Geophysical Research Letters</i>:<br /><br /><i>Sugano, T.; Heki, K.</i><br /><b>Isostasy of the Moon from high-resolution gravity and topography data: Implication for its thermal history</b><br /><i>Geophys. Res. Lett</i>., Vol. 31, No. 24, L24703<br />10.1029/2004GL022059<br />31 December 2004<br />Abstract
 
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Peter the Dane

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I will try help you in the quest of keeping this topic alive <img src="/images/icons/smile.gif" /><br /><br />the problem, as ussual, are monny. there are plenty to do and the littel resources the goverments are spending are spread out over so large fields of research....<br />all that are needed to make the breaktrough are a way to generate monny in space, make the moon paying for its own exploration.<br /><br /><br />Peter Gotthardsen<br />
 
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