Moon's polar craters could be the best place to find lunar ice
Washington, Dec 18 (ANI): Scientists have determined that the best place to find ice on the lunar surface could be the Moon's polar craters.
According to a team of astrophysicists, led by an expert at Durham University, if frozen water exists, then it is most likely to be found near to the moon's poles in craters that are permanently shaded from the sun.
Their findings are based on a new computer analysis of data from the Lunar Prospector, a space probe sent to the moon in 1998 by NASA.
The researchers showed that hydrogen on the moon is concentrated into polar craters where temperatures are colder than minus 170 degrees Celsius.
Hydrogen, together with the oxygen that is abundant within moon rock, is a key element in making water.
If ice is present in the craters, then the researchers said it could potentially provide a water source for the eventual establishment of a manned base on the moon, which could be used as a platform for exploration into the further reaches of our solar system.
The research team determined that if the hydrogen is present as water ice, then the average concentration in some craters corresponds to ten grams of ice in each kilogram of moon rock.
However, the researchers said that instead of being water ice, hydrogen might be present in the form of protons fired from the sun into the dusty lunar surface.
According to Dr Vincent Eke, in the Institute for Computational Cosmology, at Durham University, this research applies a newly developed technique to data from the Lunar Prospector mission to show that hydrogen is actually concentrated into the permanently shaded polar craters.
"Water ice should be stable for billions of years on the moon provided that it receives no sunlight," he said.
"If the hydrogen is present as water ice, then our results imply that the top meter of the moon holds about enough water to fill up Kielder Water," he added.
Kielder Water, in Northumberland, UK, holds 200,000 million litres of water, making it the largest UK manmade reservoir in Northern Europe.
The research may be of immediate use in lunar exploration.
"These results will help NASA's soon-to-be launched Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) and Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) missions," said Dr Richard Elphic, in the Planetary Systems Branch, NASA Ames Research Center.
"For example, LCROSS aims to liberate water by impacting into permanently shadowed polar terrain where ice may exist, and our improved maps of hydrogen abundance can help LCROSS select a promising impact site," he added. (ANI)
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