A grass-roots effort to retrieve high-resolution lunar
images from long-dead probes has hit paydirt, with a new view of a region of
the moon known as the Sea of Storms.
The Lunar Orbiter Image Recovery Project published the picture, which was originally taken in February 1967. The photo shows the region around the crater Galilaei and Planitia Descensus in Oceanus Procellarum, also known as Sea of Storms.
The project is working to retrieve images taken by five NASA space probes that preceded the Apollo moon missions in the 1960s. You can read more about the program here.
If you happened to be orbiting the moon on Feb. 9, 2009, and looked back at Earth, you'd find the home planet slipping neatly in front of the sun, a view in fact captured by Japan's Kaguya spacecraft (formerly known as Selene.)
Got a few more details -- and a lovely spin -- from NASA about the delay of Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter launch. George Diller, a long-time happy soul who covers unmanned launches for the Kennedy Space Center press office says International Launch Services, (the Lockheed-Boeing venture that's handling the launch) asked NASA if it would mind swapping launch slots with another customer. (Diller didn't mention who, but it's the aforementioned DoD.)
With a deft hand for making lemonade, Diller explains that slipping LRO's launch three months is really a good thing because 1) there are more opportunities for launching in February than during the previously reserved launch window (18 vs 8); and 2) there's more time to deal with any spacecraft problems that may come up during thermal vacuum testing, which is about to get under way at Goddard Space Flight Center.
Not that there's been any problems, he adds, but just in case.
About the only down-side Diller could see was that the scientists and engineers working on LRO's piggyback payload, LCROSS, which is supposed to crash down into a darkened crater so folks can see if anything interesting (i.e. WATER) pops out during the impact, will have to choose a new target.
"The geometry between Earth, the moon and the sun will be different in February," Diller said. The team needs good lighting, good radio links to Earth AND a nice shadowed crater in the polar regions of the moon.
No word on how much more it'll cost to keep the team going an extra few months, but heck, that's probably downright un-American to even ask.
NASA’s kick-off mission under Apollo 2.0 will be off to a late start, Aviation Week is reporting. Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, a pole-circling probe that will lay the groundwork for human landings on the moon, apparently is grounded until Feb. 27, 2009. The spacecraft had been targeted for launch in November.
Two years ago, NASA awarded a $136-million contract to Lockheed Martin Commercial Launch Services to put LRO into lunar orbit for a year-long mapping mission. The company plans to use one of its heavy-lift Atlas 5 boosters.
AvWk, however, says LRO’s rocket and launch slot will be used instead for a classified military mission.
No enlightenment about which came from: chicken or egg. Since LRO and sidekick impactor payload LCROSS seems have been meeting all their milestones, I’m betting egg -- military wants the rocket.
Caption: More detailed maps of the moon's south pole, imaged here by the Clementine spacecraft, will have to wait until '09.

I’m a (recovering) deadline junkie. It’s a product of 25 years of news writing. So even when I don’t have to write on deadline, it’s the fallback position, the environment I’m most accustomed to.
All that is by way of explanation -- and apology -- for giving you exactly one day’s notice to send your name to the moon.
It’s part of an educational outreach program NASA is running as it prepares to send off a new orbiter to map the moon’s surface. A microchip etched with people’s names -- NASA's goal is 1 million -- will be installed on the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, which is scheduled for launch later this year.
LRO is a predecessor mission to NASA’s return to the moon with astronauts. It is designed to map the lunar surface so the space agency can decide where to land its crews and where to set up a base. The last time anyone set foot on the moon was in 1972. I’m not saying you’ll win a cosmic lottery or something, but it’s kind of cool to know that your name will be up there.
Irene Klotz Discovery News space correspondent Irene Klotz chronicles humanity's efforts to leave the planet. One day, she wants to see for herself what all the fuss is about.



Recent Comments