The Hindu (Bangalore)

ISRO nds proof of enhanced possibilit­y of water ice in polar craters of the moon

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A study by Indian space scientists has found evidence of enhanced possibilit­y of water ice occurrence in the polar craters of the moon.

The study was done by scientists of ISRO’s Space Applicatio­ns Centre (SAC) in collaborat­ion with researcher­s of IIT Kanpur, University of Southern California, Jet Propulsion Laboratory and IIT (ISM) Dhanbad.

The study suggests that the amount of sub-surface ice in the ‡rst couple of metres is about ‡ve to eight times larger than the one on the surface in both poles. As such, drilling on the moon to sample or excavate that ice will be primordial for future missions and long-term human presence.

Moreover, the study suggests that the extent of water ice in the northern polar region is twice that in the southern polar region.

The study con‡rms the hypothesis that the primary source of sub-surface water ice in the lunar poles is out-gassing during volcanism in the Imbrian period. The results also conclude that the distributi­on of water ice is likely governed by mare volcanism and preferenti­al impact cratering.

The research team used seven instrument­s comprising radar, laser, optical, neutron spectromet­er, ultra-violet spectromet­er, and thermal radiometer on board the NASA robotic spacecraft Lunar Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter to understand the origin and distributi­on of water ice on the Moon.

Accurate knowledge of the distributi­on and depth of water ice occurrence in the lunar poles, as presented in the investigat­ion, is crucial for constraini­ng the uncertaint­ies in selecting future landing and sampling sites for missions aimed at exploring and characteri­sing lunar volatiles.

This result also supports a previous study of SAC-ISRO pointing out the possibilit­y of the presence of water ice in some of the polar craters, utilising polarimetr­ic radar data from Chandrayaa­n-2 Dual-frequency Synthetic Aperture Radar instrument.

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