This Science News Wire page contains a press release issued by an organization and is provided to you "as is" with little or no review from Science X staff.

NASA's Lunar Trailblazer is launching to the moon

February 25th, 2025 Lori Dajose
NASA's Lunar Trailblazer is Launching to the Moon
NASA's Lunar Trailblazer approaches the moon as it enters its science orbit in this artist's concept. The small satellite will orbit about 60 miles (100 kilometers) above the lunar surface, producing the best-yet maps of water on the moon. Credit: Lockheed Martin Space

A new mission to study the moon is scheduled to launch this week.

NASA's Lunar Trailblazer mission is led by Caltech's Bethany Ehlmann, professor of planetary science and the Allen V. C. Davis and Lenabelle Davis Leadership Chair and director of the Keck Institute for Space Studies, and the mission is operated by IPAC at Caltech. The Lunar Trailblazer small satellite, or smallsat, will orbit the moon to understand the nature of water on the moon's surface, providing maps to guide future robotic and human explorers. Prior missions have seen hints of ice and other forms of water that could be used in a variety of ways, from purifying it for human use, to processing it for fuel and breathable oxygen for future human moon landings.

"Lunar Trailblazer pushes frontiers in a number of ways as a class of low-cost, higher-risk NASA mission that paves the way understanding ice on the moon, the water cycle on airless bodies, and resources for future explorers, all while being university based and training the next generation of explorers," says Ehlmann.

The debate about why the moon has water has focused on two possibilities: One scenario involves comets and "wet asteroids" crashing into the moon, while the other entails ancient volcanic eruptions disgorging water vapor from the moon's interior and depositing frost on its surface. Lunar Trailblazer's findings will shed light on which hypothesis is more likely and, importantly, provide maps of how much water is where on the surface. Tiny amounts are seen on the sunlit parts of the moon now, but theory and some datasets suggest that large deposits of ice might be in permanently shadowed regions located at the moon's poles.

The mission makes its measurements with two science instruments: the Lunar Thermal Mapper (LTM), built at the University of Oxford, and the High-resolution Volatiles and Minerals moon Mapper (HVM3), built at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). Caltech manages JPL for NASA.

The launch period opens February 26, and the mission then takes a low-energy trajectory that uses Earth-moon-sun gravity assists to insert into orbit around the moon four to seven months later. When it arrives, it will use HVM3 to map the wavelengths of reflected sunlight from the different forms of water over the shadowy craters and the lunar landscape. LTM will scan those mapped regions at the same time to map the temperature of the surface. By measuring the same locations at different times of day, Lunar Trailblazer will determine if the amount of water changes on this airless body.

A feature of the mission is that spacecraft operations are based at a university rather than in aerospace industry or a NASA center. Caltech's IPAC will operate Lunar Trailblazer from campus, leveraging decades of experience operating space telescope science instruments and its data processing. Undergraduate students from Caltech and Pasadena City College also work on Lunar Trailblazer's mission ground software and commanding under the guidance of IPAC technical staff, providing training internships working on a space mission.

"Lunar Trailblazer offers an opportunity to leverage IPAC experience in new ways to enable efficient campus-based mission operations," says George Helou, research professor of physics and executive director of IPAC. "Innovative approaches to operations, including student contributions, are necessary to realize the scientific promise of smallsats within their limited budgets."

Provided by California Institute of Technology

Citation: NASA's Lunar Trailblazer is launching to the moon (2025, February 25) retrieved 25 February 2025 from https://sciencex.com/wire-news/501958433/nasas-lunar-trailblazer-is-launching-to-the-moon.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.