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Scientists Find Traces of Water Ice Around the Moon’s Poles

Oindrila Banerjee
Oindrila Banerjee
A English Literature student, love reading books, love literature and history, and enthusiastic about travelling. She likes to read random pieces of information and like watching films. She likes how refreshing it is to learn something new everyday. Her goal is to earn enough to take a trip round the globe.

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A team of scientists, led by Shuai Li of the University of Hawaii and Brown University, and including Richard Elphic from NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley, has used data from NASA’s Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) to identify three specific signatures that definitively prove the presence of water ice on the surface of the Moon. The water ice is spread near the darkest and coldest regions of the lunar poles, in the shadows of craters, which have never received any sunlight due to a small tilt of the Moon’s rotation axis, with the warmest temperatures of these regions never reaching above -250 degrees Fahrenheit.

The distribution of the ice concentrates in the lunar craters of the South Pole, while the North Pole has a more widely but sparsely spread layer of ice. M3, aboard the Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft, was launched in 2008 by the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO). The instrument was well equipped to confirm the presence of ice on the Moon; and as such it has collected data that picked up the reflective properties expected from ice, along with directly measuring the distinctive way the ice molecules absorb infrared light, in order to distinguish between liquid water, water vapour, and solid ice.

Ice on Moon PolesWhile previous observations hinted at the presence of water ice on lunar surface, it might as well have been attributed to the highly reflective lunar surface. The latest findings, however, confirm the presence of possibly ancient surface ice found within the top few millimeters. This further hints at the possibility of water being accessible as a resource for future expeditions to explore and even stay on the Moon; along with making it comparatively easier to access the water detected beneath the Moon’s surface.

The future missions of NASA and its commercial partners shall focus on exploring more facts about the water ice – how it got there and how it interacts with the lunar environment at large. The Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft findings have been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on August 20, 2018.

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