Showing posts with label Lunar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lunar. Show all posts

Friday, February 10, 2012

Full Map of Moon From China's Chang'e-2

China on Monday published a set of full high-resolution coverage of moon map and moon images with a resolution of seven meters captured by the country's second moon orbiter, the Chang'e-2.

The map and images, released by the State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defence (SASTIND), are the highest-resolution photos of the entirety of the moon's surface to be published thus far, said Liu Dongkui, deputy chief commander of China's lunar probe project.

The images were photographed by a charge-coupled device (CCD) stereo camera on the Chang'e-2 from heights of 100 km and 15 km over the lunar surface between October 2010 and May 2011, according to a statement from SASTIND.

SOURCE

Thursday, October 08, 2009

Nasa Moon Bombing Live Stream Video

Tomorrow, watch the live TV broadcast of the LCROSS mission on NASA TV when NASA will bomb the moon to try to find water underneath the lunar surface. The moon blasting live streaming is scheduled to start at 6:15 am EDT/3:15 am PDT on October 9.

The first hour will include commentary and status reports. The actual impact should start at 7:30 am EDT/4:30 am PDT (11:30 UT).

Video:


Update: Actual LCROSS mission impact video

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

3D Map of the Moon completed by China

China has completed a high-resolution, 3D map of the entire surface of the moon, in an important step towards a future lunar landing, an expert involved in the project said Tuesday.

After putting its first man into space in 2003 -- only the third nation to do so -- China is aiming to launch an unmanned rover on the moon's surface by 2012 and a manned mission to the moon by around 2020.

The map was made using image data obtained by a camera on Chang'e 1, China's first lunar probe, Liu Xianlin of the Chinese Academy of Surveying and Mapping, who headed the project review panel, told AFP.

Liu called the achievement an important step for China along the path towards a future lunar landing.

China plans to launch a second lunar probe in October 2010, which will generate a map of an even higher resolution, according to Liu.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Water on moon shows in India's Chandrayaan satellite

The US National Aeronautical Space Agency (NASA) has said that a mapping sensor aboard India's Chandrayaan satellite has found water on the Lunar surface.

The Chandrayaan Moon mission detecting evidence of water on the lunar surface could lead to new questions on the origins of life.

The data sources by the Chandrayaan show water may be actively moving around on the surface of the moon. Carle Pieters of Brown University in Rhode Island and his colleagues reviewed data from India's Chandrayaan 1 mission -- India's first mission to the moon -- and found some evidence of water.

Two NASA probes called Deep Impact and Cassini also found evidence of water, according to experts. This find will prompt a reexamination of the moon and its origins as well.

Next month, NASA's Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite or LCROSS mission will try to detect water by deliberately crashing a large spacecraft onto the moon.

Amitabha Ghosh, a NASA scientist involved in studying Mars, said, "It is a very significant finding if we ever are to venture out to set up a base anywhere in the solar system, moon is the nearest destination."

"We just hope that the water is plenty enough and easily extractable so that you can have purification process for human use. This is potentially a very big discovery for this country," Ghosh said.

Former ISRO Chairman and member Planning Commission K Kasturirangan said the discovery was very significant.

"Water is very important, ultimately in the long run if humankind has to go and habitate the moon, one of the important requirements is that you should have adequate water for survival," said Kasturirangan, under whose leadership the Chandrayaan mission was conceived in 2003.

The Rs 386-crore craft was launched on October 22 last year and terminated on August 30 following a communication failure. One of the mission’s main goals was to sniff for water.

What does this discovery mean?

Firstly, it shows that the moon is hydrated .also water could have come from water-bearing comets striking the surface. Water may also have come from the interaction of the solar wind with moon rocks and soils. This solar wind is made of mostly protons, or positively charged hydrogen atoms which hit the lunar surface and break apart oxygen bonds in soil materials.

What next?

This find could also spark research into colonization of the moon. It could spark quest to find life on the moon and NASA is slated to deliberately crash a large spacecraft onto the moon to check for life.