The Peterborough Examiner

Ice-rich areas found on moon

Discovery holds promise for future landing missions, researcher­s say

- MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. — The moon’s shadowed, frigid nooks and crannies may hold frozen water in more places and in larger quantities than previously suspected, good news for astronauts at future lunar bases wwho could tap into these re- sources for drinking and making rocket fuel, scientists reported Monday.

While previous observatio­ns have indicated millions of tons of ice in the permanentl­y shadowed craters of the moon’s poles, a pair of studies in the journal Nature Astronomy take the availabili­ty of lunar surface water to a new level.

More than 40,000 square kilometres of lunar terrain have the capability to trap water in the form of ice, according to a team led by the University of Colorado’s Paul Hayne.

That’s 20 per cent more area than previous estimates, he said.

These ice-rich areas are near the moon’s north and south poles. Temperatur­es are so low in these so-called cold traps — minus 163 C — that they could hold onto the water for millions or even billions of years.

“We believe this will help expand the possible landing sites ffor future lunar missions seek- ing water, opening up real estate previously considered ‘off limits’ for being bone dry,” Hayne said in an email to The Associated Press.

Using data from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter, the researcher­s identified cold traps as small as a few metres across and as wide as 30 km and more, and used computer models to get all the way down to micrometre­s in size.

“Since the little ones are too small to see from orbit, despite being vastly more numerous, wwe can’t yet identify ice inside them,” t Hayne said. “Once we’re on the surface, we will do that experiment.”

For a second study, scientists used NASA’s airborne infrared observator­y Sofia to conclusive­ly identify water molecules on the sunlit portions of the moon, just outside the polar regions.

Most of these molecules are likely stored in the voids between moon dust and other particles or locked inside glassy volcanic material.

Scientists believe all this water on the moon came from comets, asteroids, interplane­tary dust, the solar wind or even lunar volcanic eruptions. They’ll have a better idea of the sources “if we can get down on the surface and analyze samples of the ice,” Hayne said.

The lead researcher, Casey Honniball, a post-doctoral fellow at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, said at a news conference that she wanted to make it clear the Sofia study had not found puddles on the moon. Rather, the identified hydrogen and oxygen molecules are so far apart, they are neither in liquid or solid form, she noted.

NASA is under White House direction to put astronauts back on the moon by 2024. The space agency wants its new Artemis moon-landing program to be sustainabl­e, unlike the Apollo program a half-century ago.

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