Groundbreaking Discovery Will Enable Exploration On, And
Beyond, The Moon
A team of scientists from NASA announced Friday that
significant amounts of water ice have been found at the Moon's
South Pole. This landmark finding, achieved through analysis of the
material blasted from the lunar surface as part of the Lunar Crater
Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) mission, provides a
great boon to an international community of scientists, engineers,
and entrepreneurs cultivating a new era of lunar exploration. The
announcement also builds upon the groundbreaking research conducted
by both NASA and the Indian Space Research Organization, which
recently revealed trace amounts of water distributed across the
Moon's surface, previously thought to be more dehydrated that the
driest deserts of Earth.
The confirmation of the presence of water ice on the surface of
the Moon is a game-changing discovery for space exploration. The
Moon, already a hotly pursued destination of space agencies and
private companies from around the world, becomes even more
desirable with today's news. With ready supplies of ice, future
robotic spacecraft or human astronaut crews could generate not only
drinking water but also gaseous hydrogen and oxygen -excellent
propellants that could be used for further space exploration beyond
the Moon.
The discovery also provides new support for a private race to
return to the Moon. The Google Lunar X PRIZE, a $30 million
incentive prize created and operated by the X PRIZE Foundation,
challenges privately funded teams from around the globe to send
robots to explore the lunar surface and return high resolution
video and imagery back to the Earth. The prize program includes a
Water Detection Bonus, which pays additional prize money to teams
that use robots on the lunar surface to provide confirmation of the
presence of water ice. Until today's announcement, it was uncertain
if this bonus would be obtainable.
"The presence of significant quantities of ice on the lunar
surface catapults the Moon from an interesting waypoint to a
critical launching pad for humanity's exploration of the cosmos,"
said X PRIZE CEO and Chairman Peter Diamandis. "We're entering a
new era of lunar exploration - 'Moon 2.0,' in which an
international group of companies and governments will use the ice
and other unique resources of the Moon to help us expand the sphere
of human influence, and to help us monitor and protect the
Earth."
LCROSS Spacecraft Artists
Concept
The success of the LCROSS mission is just the latest in a recent
string of lunar probes. In the past two years, NASA, the Indian
Space Research Organization, the Japanese Aerospace Exploration
Agency, and China's National Space Administration have each placed
satellites in orbit around the Moon. With more than twenty teams
from eleven countries registered to compete in the Google Lunar X
PRIZE, we may be only a few years away from the first private lunar
mission, and the first spacecraft to explore the lunar surface
since 1976.
"We congratulate the team at NASA and the brilliant engineers
and scientists at the other space agencies who have made the
discovery announced today possible," said X PRIZE Foundation Senior
Director for Space Prize William Pomerantz. "We're confident that
these exciting findings will inspire a new generation of lunar
pioneers to continue to transcend the boundaries of what was
previously believed to be possible."