nitesh
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- May 8, 2008
- Messages
- 3,261
- Reaction score
- 0
The Hindu : National : Is there water-ice on the Moon?
Is there water-ice on the Moon?
Staff Reporter
BANGALORE: Do the permanently shadowed polar regions of the Moon contain water-ice?
This is one of the many questions that a group of 70 scientists — from the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the European Space Agency (ESA) — aim to resolve at a two-day meeting that began here on Thursday.
The meeting, which was held at the ISRO Satellite Centre, marks the 100 days since the launch of Chandrayaan-I and will unravel the data that the lunar craft has gathered during its space voyage.
Scientists will now focus their attention on identifying “areas of interest” on the lunar terrain for further exploration — including exploring the possibility of finding water-ice, said ISRO Chairman, G. Madhavan Nair.
“We will now identify areas on the Moon which need to be looked at closer for substances like water-ice. These areas will then be studied with a range instruments such as the Moon Mineralogy Mapper, Mini Synthetic Aperture Radar and Hyper-spectral Imager,” he said.
Assessment
The ISRO chief added: “We had an assessment of all the 10 instruments on board the space craft [one of the instruments — the Moon Impact Probe — was designed to crash-land on the lunar terrain] and it was confirmed that their performance has been excellent so far.” The quality of the images was high, he said.
The meeting was successful, with a good representation of scientists, he said. Around 20 scientists participated from around the world — from the United States, Germany, Sweden, the United Kingdom, Japan and the Netherlands.
It has been an eventful 100 days for Chandrayaan-I: the lunar craft has captured the first-ever images of the dark side of the Moon, confirmed the presence of iron and picked up X-ray signals from its cratered terrain. Chandrayaan-I was launched on October 22 from Sriharikota, carrying on board 11 scientific instruments. Of these, five were indigenously developed and the others developed by agencies including NASA and ESA.
Is there water-ice on the Moon?
Staff Reporter
BANGALORE: Do the permanently shadowed polar regions of the Moon contain water-ice?
This is one of the many questions that a group of 70 scientists — from the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the European Space Agency (ESA) — aim to resolve at a two-day meeting that began here on Thursday.
The meeting, which was held at the ISRO Satellite Centre, marks the 100 days since the launch of Chandrayaan-I and will unravel the data that the lunar craft has gathered during its space voyage.
Scientists will now focus their attention on identifying “areas of interest” on the lunar terrain for further exploration — including exploring the possibility of finding water-ice, said ISRO Chairman, G. Madhavan Nair.
“We will now identify areas on the Moon which need to be looked at closer for substances like water-ice. These areas will then be studied with a range instruments such as the Moon Mineralogy Mapper, Mini Synthetic Aperture Radar and Hyper-spectral Imager,” he said.
Assessment
The ISRO chief added: “We had an assessment of all the 10 instruments on board the space craft [one of the instruments — the Moon Impact Probe — was designed to crash-land on the lunar terrain] and it was confirmed that their performance has been excellent so far.” The quality of the images was high, he said.
The meeting was successful, with a good representation of scientists, he said. Around 20 scientists participated from around the world — from the United States, Germany, Sweden, the United Kingdom, Japan and the Netherlands.
It has been an eventful 100 days for Chandrayaan-I: the lunar craft has captured the first-ever images of the dark side of the Moon, confirmed the presence of iron and picked up X-ray signals from its cratered terrain. Chandrayaan-I was launched on October 22 from Sriharikota, carrying on board 11 scientific instruments. Of these, five were indigenously developed and the others developed by agencies including NASA and ESA.