June 16, 2009 Tuesday
Updated

June 16, 2009
Nasa probes back to moon
WASHINGTON - Nasa embarks on a landmark mission of lunar exploration this week with the launch of probes to scout for water sources and landing sites, in a bid to lead humanity back on the first visit to the moon since 1972.

The US space agency, with its eye on sending astronauts to Earth's natural satellite by 2020, is on course to blast off the dual LRO and LCROSS missions on Thursday atop an Atlas V rocket - a day behind schedule to accommodate the delayed shuttle Endeavour.

It is the first step on the long haul journey to launch explorations further into our solar system, to the planet Mars and beyond.

'The robotic mission will give us information we need to make informed decisions about any future human presence on the moon,' program manager Todd May told reporters on Monday.

The Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (Lcross) in particular looks set to be one of Nasa's most spectacular bids at discovery for years.

With the objective of seeking out water ice on the moon - a critical component for any planning for manned lunar colonies - the probe will hurl itself into one of the permanently shadowed lunar craters, on the dark side of the moon that never sees sunshine.

At impact, the kamikaze explorer will be traveling at approximately 1.55 miles per second (2.5 kilometres per second) - some 5,580 mph (9,000 km/h).

It's impact will be a two-fold effort.

First the craft's second stage rocket, after having detached from the probe just under 10 hours earlier, will slam into the moon and be followed just minutes later by the probe so the scientific instruments can burrow as deep as possible.

In total, Nasa said, the two impacts will excavate some 500 metric tons of lunar material. -- AFP

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