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Lunar Secrets
Scientists Envision Searching the Moon for Clues About Earth

Photo gallery View a photo gallery of American missions to the moon.

audio icon Listen to David Kestenbaum's report.

Moon rocks brought back to earth Moon rock brought back to earth.
Photo: NASA

Upcoming moon missions:

The LUNAR-A Mission
This is a Japanese mission to image the moon, monitor moonquakes, measure the near-surface thermal properties and heat flux, and study the lunar core and interior structure. Launch is planned for early 2003.
• More information about this mission from the European Space Agency.

SELenological and ENgineering Explorer (SELENE)
This idea for a lunar orbiter/lander mission was developed by the Japanese to study the origin, evolution, and tectonics of the moon. Launch is planned for 2005.
• More information about this mission from NASA.

The SMART 1 Mission
The SMART-1 (Small Missions for Advanced Research in Technology 1) is a lunar orbiter designed to test spacecraft technologies for future missions. Launch is planned for 2003.
• More information about this mission from the European Space Agency and NASA.

The LunarSat Mission
LunarSat is a European proposal for a lunar micro-orbiter to investigate the suitability of the moon's south pole for the first permanent human outpost.
• More information about this mission from LunarSat.

Information courtesy of the Lunar Planetary Institute, NASA




August 4, 2002 -- It's hard to know exactly when or how life began on Earth; there are very few rocks and fossils left over from the planet's early days. The Earth has swallowed some of its crust, and water has worn away its surface. Now a team of researchers has discovered a place where early signs of life may be lurking. Unfortunately, it's some 250,000 miles away -- on the moon. NPR's David Kestenbaum reports for Weekend Edition Sunday.

Scientists estimate the Earth is about 4 and a half billion years old. Planets were just forming at the time, and the solar system was a chaotic place. Meteorites crashed into the Earth regularly. When they hit, bits of debris would have shot up into the air -- fast enough for some of it to escape Earth's gravity.

It's thought that the moon was orbiting much closer to the Earth then; it's possible it could have swept up some of the debris. A paper detailing that theory is being published in the astrobiology journal ICARUS.

The idea isn't unheard of, says Kestenbaum. Rocks from Mars have turned up on Earth. In the paper, co-author Guillermo Gonzalez, a physicist at Iowa State University, concluded that for every million grains of moon dust, there may be seven grains that came from Earth. And if scientists looked hard enough, there might even be a few pebbles or rocks around as well.

Maybe.

The moon's surface does preserve well, but it's also highly erosive, says Gonzales. The constant rain of micrometeorites in a sense is sandblasting everything on the surface, he explains. A 1-centimeter rock would be turned to dust in about 10 million years.

The authors of the paper envision sending a robotic explorer -- or even a human -- to search the moon for evidence of what Earth was like billions of years ago. For now, scientists have to be content with studying the 800 pounds of rock and dust brought back during the NASA Apollo missions. Most of those samples have proven to be very ancient, between 3 billion and 4.6 billion old years old.




In Depth

more icon  Search for more NPR stories about the moon.

Other Resources

Chronology of lunar and planetary exploration from NASA.

Lunar exploration missions only.

Information about SMART-1, the European Space Agency's first trip to the moon.

Moon facts from the European Space Agency.

NASA's guide to the moon along with other planets, along with lots of moon links.

Information about moon samples collected on Apollo missions, from the Lunar Planetary Institute.

Exploring the Moon homepage, also from the Lunar Planetary Institute.

The Lunar Planetary Institute's list of future and suggested moon missions.




   
   
   
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