Posted Aug 15, 2008 at 10:06AM by Isaac C. Listed in: Science Tags: Mars, NASA, crater, LCROSS
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Inside NASA's Plan to Bomb the Moon and Find Water - Image 1Moon go boom. You may have heard of NASA's plan to bomb the moon in their quest to find water on the lunar surface. Just how are they going to do it exactly? Story in the full article.

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Posted Aug 13, 2008 at 03:31AM by Charles D. Listed in: Science Tags: NASA, crater, Booster, Hawaii, LCROSS
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Logo of National Aeronatics and Space Administration - Image 1Sometime next year, NASA will launch a mission which will literally smash open some of the secrets our lunar satellite has been holding for millions of years. The LCROSS team headed by Anthony Colaprete is currently searching for the best impact sites inside various shadowed craters which may contain a good amount of frozen water. Find out more in our full article after the jump.

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Posted Feb 28, 2008 at 02:03PM by Charles D. Listed in: Science Tags: NASA, crater, Hydrogen, System 3, LCROSS
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Moon, the Earth's solitary satellite - Image 1NASA has devised a rather unconventional way of exploring the moon's South Pole. The space agency's latest mission involves crashing one of two lunar spacecrafts into a flat surface on the satellite's southern area. For more information on this new mission, check out the full article after the jump.

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Posted Jan 26, 2007 at 04:06PM by Chris L. Listed in: Science Tags: NASA, LCROSS
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Impact crater - Image 1 As part of its plans to send men back to the Moon (and more or less stay there for extended periods of time), one of NASA's first objectives is to add a new crater to the Moon. Yes, just like when ESA decided to deliberately turn SMART-1 into a permanent landmark on the lunar surface, its US counterpart will ram spent/unnecessary parts of its Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) onto the Moon, near one of its poles, reports SPACE.com. They never did say if it's North or South.

Why? They want to really find out if there is polar ice underneath all that moon rock. Having usable water already on the Moon cuts a lot of weight from any potential manned lunar mission. Not only does it provide water for the essential human needs, it can also provide badly needed hydrogen and oxygen for rocket fuel. The two planned impacts should eject material into space that can then be visually analyzed for presence of water. Beats waiting months to find signs of erosion on an otherworldy surface.

Not only will LCROSS be monitoring these impact tests (does give a whole new meaning to the term, don't it?), but NASA also plans to direct Earth-bound telescopes to observe the impact debris. They say it'll be big enough that even reasonable-grade amateur telescopes will see the event. Kim Possible says: "Slammin'."

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