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NASA Sets Mission To Assess Moon Dust, Atmosphere

By Staff Writer | April 14, 2008

      The U.S. space agency will send a spacecraft to the moon to examine the lunar atmosphere and any moon dust it contains.

      That Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) will launch before U.S. moon exploration activities accelerate during the next decade.

      LADEE will gather detailed information about conditions near the surface and environmental influences on lunar dust.

      A thorough understanding of these influences will help researchers understand how future exploration may shape the lunar environment and how the environment may affect future explorers.

      "LADEE represents a low-cost approach to science missions, enabling faster science return and more frequent missions," said Ames Director S. Pete Worden. "These measurements will provide scientific insight into the lunar environment, and give our explorers a clearer understanding of what they’ll be up against as they set up the first outpost and begin the process of settling the solar system."

      The LADEE program is a cooperative effort with Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif., Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. The total cost of the spacecraft is expected to be about $80 million.

      Ames will manage the mission, build the spacecraft and perform mission operations. Goddard will perform environmental testing and launch vehicle integration. The mission will be established within Marshall’s newly created Lunar Science Program Office. Marshall will draw upon experience gained from managing a larger suite of low-cost, small satellite missions through the Discovery and New Frontiers Program.

      LADEE will fly to the moon as a secondary payload on the Discovery mission called Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL), which is designed to take ultra-precise gravity field measurements of the moon.

      Current plans call for the GRAIL and LADEE spacecraft to launch together on a Delta II rocket and separate after they are on a lunar trajectory. LADEE will take approximately four months to travel to the moon, then undergo a month-long checkout phase and begin 100 days of science operations.

      LADEE is one of many activities to support lunar exploration planned by the Science Mission Directorate in Washington. Last year, NASA also established a lunar science institute at Ames. Research teams will address current topics in basic lunar science and possible astronomical, solar and Earth science investigations that could be performed from the moon. In addition, NASA is preparing for scientific investigations following the planned launch later this year of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO). After a 30-year hiatus, LRO represents NASA’s first step toward returning humans to the moon.