Thursday, June 18, 2009
Lunar Orbiters Finally Ready for Liftoff
NASA is taking the first step toward returning humans to the moon: it's sending a pair of robotic lunar explorers.
By Brittany Sauser
| Technicians complete connections between the LRO and LCROSS spacecraft and the Atlas V rocket at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, in Florida. Credit: NASA/Dimitri Gerondidakis |
Update 6:18 p.m. EDT: the orbiters have launched! Follow their mission progress.
At approximately 5:12 P.M. EDT today, a pair of robotic lunar
"scouts" will hopefully be launched aboard an Atlas V rocket. Their mission is to map the moon's
surface, search for ice, and assess levels of radiation in the
environment. The flight is the first
U.S. mission to the moon in more than a decade, and the first step toward returning
humans by 2020.
The first of the two lunar probes is a spacecraft
called the Lunar
Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), and it is part of NASA's Vision for Space
Exploration. Richard Vondrak, a project scientist for LRO, told me during an
interview last year that "LRO is the most advanced lunar satellite NASA
has built. It will provide information that would have been impossible to
collect a few decades ago."
LRO will carry seven instruments, including a
cosmic-ray telescope, to measure the effects that lunar radiation could have on
humans, and a laser altimeter, to map the surface of the moon. It will also
take high-resolution images and temperature
measurements.
The second lunar probe is a smaller spacecraft called the
Lunar CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS), and it has a simpler mission: to crash into the surface of the moon where experts believe that ice may be present. Unlike LRO's four-day cruise to the moon, it will take LCROSS months to get there. It will ride on the Atlas V upper stage and will first
observe the upper stage's smackdown before flying through the plume and crashing into the moon's surface minutes later. LRO and
the Hubble Space Telescope will observe the collisions, hopefully viewing and
sensing any water ice that gets thrown up.
Engineers are anxious to get the probes into space--the
$583 million mission has been delayed since October 2008, and has endured more setbacks this
week due to Space Shuttle launch delays.
In addition, China, Japan, and
India have launched lunar probes within the past three years. (China's Chang'e 1 and
Japan's Kaguya both launched in 2007 and crashed
into the moon this year.) Russia and Europe have more recently joined
in, announcing their own lunar ambitions but not fully disclosing their plans. The race to
return humans to
the moon is well under way.
The probes have three chances to launch this evening, and a
few opportunities on Friday. But the flight window closes on Saturday, and then it
will be another two weeks before the spacecrafts get another shot at liftoff.
| Atlas V launches from Florida carrying LRO and LCROSS. Credit: NASA |
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