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From NASA's Official Website---



PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA scientists have discovered water molecules in the polar regions of the moon. Instruments aboard three separate spacecraft revealed water molecules in amounts that are greater than predicted, but still relatively small. Hydroxyl, a molecule consisting of one oxygen atom and one hydrogen atom, also was found in the lunar soil. The findings were published in Thursday's edition of the journal Science.

NASA's Moon Mineralogy Mapper, or M3, instrument reported the observations. M3 was carried into space on Oct. 22, 2008, aboard the Indian Space Research Organization's Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft. Data from the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer, or VIMS, on NASA's Cassini spacecraft, and the High-Resolution Infrared Imaging Spectrometer on NASA's Epoxi spacecraft contributed to confirmation of the finding. The spacecraft imaging spectrometers made it possible to map lunar water more effectively than ever before.

The confirmation of elevated water molecules and hydroxyl at these concentrations in the moon's polar regions raises new questions about its origin and effect on the mineralogy of the moon. Answers to these questions will be studied and debated for years to come.

"Water ice on the moon has been something of a holy grail for lunar scientists for a very long time," said Jim Green, director of the Planetary Science Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "This surprising finding has come about through the ingenuity, perseverance and international cooperation between NASA and the India Space Research Organization."

From its perch in lunar orbit, M3's state-of-the-art spectrometer measured light reflecting off the moon's surface at infrared wavelengths, splitting the spectral colors of the lunar surface into small enough bits to reveal a new level of detail in surface composition. When the M3 science team analyzed data from the instrument, they found the wavelengths of light being absorbed were consistent with the absorption patterns for water molecules and hydroxyl.

"For silicate bodies, such features are typically attributed to water and hydroxyl-bearing materials," said Carle Pieters, M3's principal investigator from Brown University, Providence, R.I. "When we say 'water on the moon,' we are not talking about lakes, oceans or even puddles. Water on the moon means molecules of water and hydroxyl that interact with molecules of rock and dust specifically in the top millimeters of the moon's surface.

The M3 team found water molecules and hydroxyl at diverse areas of the sunlit region of the moon's surface, but the water signature appeared stronger at the moon's higher latitudes. Water molecules and hydroxyl previously were suspected in data from a Cassini flyby of the moon in 1999, but the findings were not published until now.

"The data from Cassini's VIMS instrument and M3 closely agree," said Roger Clark, a U.S. Geological Survey scientist in Denver and member of both the VIMS and M3 teams. "We see both water and hydroxyl. While the abundances are not precisely known, as much as 1,000 water molecule parts-per-million could be in the lunar soil. To put that into perspective, if you harvested one ton of the top layer of the moon's surface, you could get as much as 32 ounces of water."

For additional confirmation, scientists turned to the Epoxi mission while it was flying past the moon in June 2009 on its way to a November 2010 encounter with comet Hartley 2. The spacecraft not only confirmed the VIMS and M3 findings, but also expanded on them.

"With our extended spectral range and views over the north pole, we were able to explore the distribution of both water and hydroxyl as a function of temperature, latitude, composition, and time of day," said Jessica Sunshine of the University of Maryland. Sunshine is Epoxi's deputy principal investigator and a scientist on the M3 team. "Our analysis unequivocally confirms the presence of these molecules on the moon's surface and reveals that the entire surface appears to be hydrated during at least some portion of the lunar day."

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., manages the M3 instrument, Cassini mission and Epoxi spacecraft for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. The Indian Space Research Organization built, launched and operated the Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft.
 
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Again from NASA's website-

Images by NASA's Moon Mineralogy Mapper onboard Chandrayan-1 that confirm the findings

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These images show a very young lunar crater on the side of the moon that faces away from Earth, as viewed by NASA's Moon Mineralogy Mapper on the Indian Space Research Organization's Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft. On the left is an image showing brightness at shorter infrared wavelengths. On the right, the distribution of water-rich minerals (light blue) is shown around a small crater. Both water- and hydroxyl-rich materials were found to be associated with material ejected from the crater.

Credits: ISRO/NASA/JPL-Caltech/USGS/Brown Univ.
 
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And this is what ISRO says. From their website--




Chandrayaan-1, India’s first mission to Moon, was launched with the prime objective of finding traces of water on the lunar surface besides mapping minerals and chemicals on the Moon. Towards this, a host of sophisticated instruments were included in Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft, like Moon Impact Probe (MIP) and Hyper-Spectral Imager (HySI) from ISRO as well as Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) and Miniature Synthetic Aperture Radar (Mini-SAR) through NASA to collect relevant data from the lunar surface. During the mission, excellent quality of data from all these instruments has been obtained. While M3 has covered nearly 97% of the lunar surface, some of the other instruments have covered more than 90%.

A path-breaking finding has evolved recently from the detailed analysis of the data obtained from M3, which has clearly indicated the presence of water molecules on the lunar surface extending from lunar poles to about 60 deg. Latitude. Hydroxyl, a molecule consisting of one oxygen atom and one hydrogen atom, was also found in the lunar soil. The confirmation of water molecules and hydroxyl molecule in the moon's polar regions raises new questions about its origin and its effect on the mineralogy of the moon.

M3 measures the intensity of reflected sunlight from the lunar surface at infrared wavelengths, splitting the spectral colours of the lunar surface into small enough bits revealing finer details of the lunar surface composition. This enabled identification of the presence of various minerals on the lunar surface that have characteristic spectral signature at specific wavelengths. Since reflection of sunlight occurs near the moon’s surface, such studies provide information on the mineral composition of the top crust of a few millimeters of the lunar surface. The Indian instrument HySI, that covers the wavelength region 0.4 to 0.9 micron, also provided additional data in this regard that helped in better understanding of moon’s mineral composition.

The findings from M3 onboard Chandrayaan-1 clearly shows a marked signature in the infrared region of 2.7 to 3.2 micron in the absorption spectrum, which provided a clear indication of the presence of hydroxyl and water molecules.

The scientific team, after detailed analysis, has come to the conclusion that there are traces of hydroxyl (OH) and water (H2O) molecules on the surface of the moon closer to the polar region. It is also concluded that they are in the form of a thin layer embedded in rocks and chemical compounds on the surface of the moon and the quantity is also extremely small of the order of about 700 ppm. These molecules could have come from the impact of comets or radiation from the sun. But most probable source could be low energy hydrogen carried by solar wind impacting on the minerals on lunar surface. This in turn forms OH or H2O molecules by deriving the oxygen from metal oxide.

Following these findings, the scientific team revisited the data from NASA’s Deep Impact Mission launched in 2005 which carried an instrument similar to M3. Deep Impact Probe observed the moon during the period June 2 and 9, 2009. This, along with some laboratory tests carried out from samples brought from Apollo missions, has confirmed that the signature is genuine and there is a thin layer of surface mineral which contains traces of hydroxyl and water molecules.

The M3 observations are further strengthened by results obtained from the analysis of archived data of lunar observation in 1999 by another NASA Mission, Cassini, on its way to Saturn. This data set also revealed clear signatures of both OH and H2O absorption features on the lunar surface.

The analysis of the huge volume of M3 data was carried out by a joint team of scientists from US and India. The lead role was taken up by Dr.Carle Pieters, Principal Investigator from Brown University, USA and Prof. J N Goswami, Principal Scientist, Chandrayaan-1 from Physical Research Laboratory of India`s Department of Space. The findings were published in Sciencexpress in its September 24, 2009 edition.

Analysis of data from other instruments on board Chandrayaan-1 is in progress.
 
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3. its a great discovery and not just india and united states but whole world should take credit for it.
Not sure if share your enthusiasm and your magnanimity. I wonder why Somalia should also take 'credit' for it.

10. we cant even use water from our own sea. this is moon water may contain anythign from virus to some deadly chemical.
You do realise, that if indeed moon water contains 'virus', it would be the first evidence of life in space, other than earth - the Holy Grail of space research.

Anyway, kudos to the team of CY-1. That this was achieved in the very first attempt and with a ridiculously low budget, make it even more significant. The team deserves all the praise for this double whammy. ISRO has also proved that the Indian space programme is not just for the sake of empty national prestige - like one very big country - but it wants to sincerely and significantly contribute to the world of science.

I doff my hat.
 
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it is greaty achivement by ISRO to find water in the first attempt of moon exploration...

And it is mainly due to the closeness of CY-1 to the moon surface because of that M3 able to get clear view of moon...

Even NASA is praising CY-1 and ISRO for this effort which first time confirm the presence of water on moon.....

With this discovery, CY-1 and ISRO book their name in the HISTORY OF MANKIND FOREVER....:cheers::victory::yahoo:
 
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it is greaty achivement by ISRO to find water in the first attempt of moon exploration...

And it is mainly due to the closeness of CY-1 to the moon surface because of that M3 able to get clear view of moon...

Even NASA is praising CY-1 and ISRO for this effort which first time confirm the presence of water on moon.....

With this discovery, CY-1 and ISRO book their name in the HISTORY OF MANKIND FOREVER....:cheers::victory::yahoo:


Congrate. to my Indians friend; way to go !

BTW; Any plan to further collect the water sample or something like

that ?:cheers::pakistan::china:
 
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(09-24) 20:12 PDT -- When the Apollo astronauts returned from the moon decades ago, scientists analyzed every precious rock, pebble and dust sample the pioneers had brought back with them to Earth, but found not a trace of water.

Now, suddenly, everything has changed.:agree:

A new generation of scientists, with the latest instruments sending back fresh signals from three vastly different spacecraft, has discovered chemical proof that water does indeed lie across the moon's surface - molecules of it in only a few parts per million, perhaps, but suggestive that deep in the moon's interior may lie abundant quantities of life-giving H{-2}O.

The news comes little more than two weeks before the spacecraft called LCROSS from NASA's Ames Research Center in Mountain View will deliberately crash its 2-ton spent launch rocket into a permanently shadowed lunar crater on Oct. 9, hoping that clouds of long-hidden dusty debris, suddenly illuminated by sunlight, will reveal evidence water exists beneath the lunar surface.

Anthony Colaprete, chief scientist for the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite mission, was not surprised by the discovery because other NASA scientists have been sharing their tentative findings with him for months.

"This is really exciting," he said today. "Although it's not exactly what we're looking for, it's striking that there's water in such wide areas of the moon. Now we're hoping we find much larger quantities in water-bearing rocks from deep inside the crater we're aiming for."

Friday, in the journal Science, one team of scientists is reporting that signs of water molecules have been detected in lunar rocks, observed from a far-distant spacecraft named Deep Impact that is on its way to sample a comet named Hartley-2 next year.

Another report came from the scientists monitoring the Cassini spacecraft that is orbiting Saturn. They said they had unexpectedly found evidence of water on the lunar surface after they aimed Cassini and its instruments at the moon to collect data.

Finally, a lunar-orbiting spacecraft named Chandrayaan-1, India's entry into the spacefaring family of nations, has used its radar instrument operating in the infrared region of the spectrum to detect water as well as molecules of Hydroxyl, a chemical related to water, but made of only a single atom of hydrogen plus an oxygen atom.:angel:
In a commentary published in Science today, Paul G. Lucy of the University of Hawaii's Institute of Geophysics and Planetology calculated that water in the moon's interior might be sparse - amounting to at least one-tenth of 1 percent by weight. That amount would be similar to the water content of basalt rocks found in the Earth's mid-ocean ridges.

Lucy said the three reports provide evidence for a "proven source of water on the surface of the moon."

"Perhaps the most valuable result of these new observations is that they prompt a critical re-examination of the notion that the moon is dry. It is not," he concluded.

Jessica Sunshine of the University of Maryland led the water-finding team from Deep Impact; Carle Pieters of Brown University led the 30-member lunar group that analyzed data from the Indian satellite; and Roger N. Clark of the U.S. Geological Survey in Denver was the sole data analyst from NASA's Cassini team.



Read more: Traces of water in lunar rocks may point to more
 
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India's own probe also found water on moon: ISRO
IANS 25 September 2009, 11:40am IST
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BANGALORE: India's own Moon Impact Probe (MIP) on board the country's maiden lunar craft had discovered water on the moon, a finding confirmed by
US space agency NASA's probe that was also aboard Chandrayaan-1, India's top space scientist G Madhavan Nair said here on Friday.

India's first lunar mission had made a "path-breaking and real discovery" by establishing the presence of water on the moon, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) chairman Nair said.

While expressing pride in the achievement, Nair added: "But the water is not in the form of sea or lake or puddle or drops. It is embedded on the surface in minerals and rocks."

Apart from India's MIP, the Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) of NASA on board Chandrayaan-1 confirmed the presence of water. The lunar mission had to be aborted Aug 30 after it lost radio contact with Earth.

According to Nair, the "quantity found is much larger than expected".

On whether water can be extracted, Nair said: "Yes, we can. But one tonne of soil may yield half a litre."

Nair said MIP picked up signals about the presence of water as it journeyed down to land on the moon surface.

"One of the main objectives of Chandrayaan-1 was to look for the presence of water. Our MIP confirmed it."

He said they had indications of the finding "way back in June", but waited all these days to make it public as they wanted the findings to come out in a scientific journal first.

"The volume of data collected from Chandrayaan-1 is phenomenal. It may take six months to three years to analyse it.":cheers:
go ISRO go...:smitten:
 
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I didn't get a chance to contribute in this thread, but if Chandrayaan-1 has discovered water on the Moon, I believe it's a great development for mankind. Correct me if I'm wrong, but NASA stopped its moon missions decades ago. They didn't get a chance to use their latest machinery up there and I believe that's why Chandrayaan-1 was successful in finding traces of h2o on the moon.

After this development, I think NASA will show some sort of a "Special" interest in moon missions once again.
 
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you are right buddy, but ISRO's achievement is a land mark in our space program:cheers:
 
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I didn't get a chance to contribute in this thread, but if Chandrayaan-1 has discovered water on the Moon, I believe it's a great development for mankind. Correct me if I'm wrong, but NASA stopped its moon missions decades ago. They didn't get a chance to use their latest machinery up there and I believe that's why Chandrayaan-1 was successful in finding traces of h2o on the moon.

After this development, I think NASA will show some sort of a "Special" interest in moon missions once again.

They haven't abondoned it fully... but they do have less interest in it .. coz of absence of Atomosphere on its surface... NASA in its intial days was interested in Life on other planet(s)...but later on Energy and other metals become their priority..... Thts the reason .... NASA and european space agency launched various missions for Europa( staellite of Jupitar)..and on other staetllites of Jupitar... coz of presence of methane and other carbon rich gases......
 
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Chandrayaan-I mission was a complete success, says ISRO chairman- ET Cetera-News By Industry-News-The Economic Times

Chandrayaan-I mission was a complete success, says ISRO chairman


BANGALORE: Terming the finding of water on the Lunar surface a 'historic' one, ISRO Chairman G Madhavan Nair on Friday said that the Chandrayaan-I
mission was a complete success.

Addressing mediapersons here, Nair said: ":lol::cheers:."

Confirming the presence of water on the Lunar surface, he said: "All over the world people are applauding the Chandrayaan's achievement. The discovery of water on the moon has been acknowledged as a significant discovery. The main aim of the Chandrayaan1 mission has been achieved."

On the collection of the data, he said that as the data is huge so it would take six months to three years before all of it is analysed and digested.

Speaking on the finding of water on the Lunar surface, Nair said that quantity of water on moon is more than what was expected. He added that the moon impact probe picked up strong signals of water.

"The water is not in form of sea, lake, not even as a drop. It is embedded in the surface in the minerals found there. However, the quantity of such molecules is much more than what we were expecting. It can extracted, but the quantity would be very less," he added.

Commenting on the presence of water on the moon, he said: "We are still wondering how water is present on the moon. But as per initial assessment, it seems that it is due to the solar winds and possibly meteors and asteroids that crash onto the moon surface."

However, he added that although there was a presence of water molecules doesn't mean the presence of life on the moon.

On the possibility of the establishment of a permanent lunar base, he further said that after the discovery of water, hopes for such a future endeavour have become more realistic.

Acknowledging NASA for collaboration in the discovery, he said: "We truly believe it is a pathbreaking finding. But this is just the beginning." :agree:
 
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I was following this thread & was amused at the various responses- clappings & praise from some quarters, rubbishing & pikish/peevish comments from others, and genuine disbelief from some others. The following post summarizes some of the views expressed here.
THIS IS TOTAL NONSENSE!
The moon's gravity is too small to retain light molecules such as water vapors. The 'escape velocity' of such molecular motion have long deprived the moon of water for millions of years.

The water would freeze to ice, thus preventing it from escaping you say?????

WRONG! Please study physics to understand why. :)

Well by now the news is well carried by all the press & national/ international news agencies, & out in the open, and needs no efforts at convincing anymore. My indian friends have also put plenty of postings here. Let me share my experiences.

As an Indian it was a proud moment for me. But being an ex- ISRO engineer, who has put in 16 years in ISRO and worked in the PSLV projects, before moving to private sector, I can say definitely more prouder.

Yesterday night (11:30PM) I was watching the press conference by NASA, carried live by all national & private networks here. The press conference lasted nearly more than an hour & kudos to our media, they covered it live all through without interruptions.

It was thrilling to watch Prof Carl Pieters , the NASA lead investigator of the "Moon Minerology Mapper" project associated with Chandrayan. That old lady (perhaps 65-70 years age) was bubbling with youthful ;) excitement, while presenting the findings in the press conference & answering to questions.

Earlier the press conference was inaugurated by Jim Green, the director for Planetory Science Dvision at NASA headquarters, Washington. He started by complementing ISRO, that the partnership & collaboration with ISRO which made possible this discovery with Chandrayan & the "Moon Minerology Mapper" (M3)sensor. He shared the credit for the findings with the ISRO's chandrayan team along with NASA.

"Water ice on the moon has been something of a holy grail for lunar scientists for a very long time," said Jim Green. "This surprising finding has come about through the ingenuity, perseverance and international cooperation between NASA and the India Space Research Organisation," he said.

Carl Pieters explained the enthusiasm when images from Chandrayans M3-sensor started pouring in, when she was at the ISRO's Bangalore DeepSpace network Station, during fall of 2008 and early 2009. At first we did not believe it (she said), and suspected the data may be due to sensor calibration issues. But as mounts of data started pouring in and they started analyzing the daily/sesonal variations and spatial variations (moon-equator to poles), the evidence was mounting. This prompted them to revisit the earlier data from earlier satellite Cassini-VIMS, which they have dismissed earlier as calibration issues. Point to note, Cassini was not targeted for moon, but inter-planetary in nature & on its flyby earth nearly a decade ago, its VIMS - spectrometer was pointed to moon from a great distance, & the data generated was put in cold-storage, till chandrayan's M3 data started pouring in & being analyzed by the science team, resulting in a shocker.

But the closeup data from M3, made possible by the low-moon (< 100 km) orbit of chandrayan, was more comprehensive, highly accurate (in resolution) & clinching. Moreover they could map nearly 97&#37; of lunar surface, up close for the first time. One time she even remarked about the huge volume of data send by chandrayan from M3 sensor about 20 Gigabytes of data, requires more than a year to fully analyze.

She answered to a pointed question, why it was kept secret for the past 6-8 months, that they had to follow proper scientific & patent procedures, like publishing the data in a well reputed Science journal, before going public yesterday. Accordingly a paper was published in the "Science " journal, co-authored by Carl Peiters & from ISRO side, principal scientist of Chandrayan-1, Dr JN Goswamy.
Character and Spatial Distribution of OH/H2O on the Surface of the Moon Seen by M3 on Chandrayaan-1 -- Pieters et al., 10.1126/science.1178658 -- Science

Today morning another press conference by ISRO team headed by G Madhabvan nair was there. Essentially they were waiting for the NASA conference to be over, before going public with the details. Dr JN Goswamy was explaining the details of the findings. The information presented was very complementary to the NASA press conference, and was interesting watching, for those who want to follow the science & history related to these findings.

On a Side note:
After this, there was even mention about chandrayan' s own lunar impact probe MIP (not M3) finding traces of water in November 2008, when it was shuttling towards the impact trajectory to lunar surface to plant the Indian tri-color. But during its downward path it was travelling from equator to polar region sideways, while simultaneously descending. During this path its on-board sensors has sensed the increasing profile of water detection from equator to polar region, as discovered by chandrayan's-M3 when it was switched on later (post Nov 2008).

I suspect the data may be there, but ISRO scientists must have seen it and dismissed it as irrelevant at that point in time, or atleast postponed it for later-analysis, since I don't remember any claims from ISRO at that time. They must have re-visited the data after M3's findings (ofcourse jointly by NASA & ISRO).
Any way this is a finer point & also purely my own speculation. Had they had conviction & courage at that time, they could have comeforward & generated a much bigger & exclusive scoope. :azn:
 
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I didn't get a chance to contribute in this thread, but if Chandrayaan-1 has discovered water on the Moon, I believe it's a great development for mankind. Correct me if I'm wrong, but NASA stopped its moon missions decades ago. They didn't get a chance to use their latest machinery up there and I believe that's why Chandrayaan-1 was successful in finding traces of h2o on the moon.

After this development, I think NASA will show some sort of a "Special" interest in moon missions once again.

NASA does have an active moon program in fact another manned mission is scheduled for 2020. The reason why Chandrayaan-1 was successful in finding traces of h2o on the moon was because it looked where no one else had looked before ie the Poles.

check this out


:cheers:
 
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