NASA Spacecraft to Carry Russian Science Instruments

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Oct. 3, 2007

Dwayne Brown/Melissa Mathews
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1726/1272
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx, melissa.mathews-1@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 07-219

NASA SPACECRAFT TO CARRY RUSSIAN SCIENCE INSTRUMENTS

WASHINGTON - NASA and the Russian Federal Space Agency Roscosmos have 
agreed to fly two Russian scientific instruments on NASA spacecraft 
that will conduct unprecedented robotic missions to the moon and 
Mars.

NASA Administrator Michael Griffin and Roscosmos head Anatoly Perminov 
signed agreements in Moscow on Oct. 3 to add the instruments to two 
future missions: the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, scheduled to 
launch in October 2008, and the Mars Science Laboratory, an advanced 
robotic rover scheduled to launch in 2009.

Russia's Lunar Exploration Neutron Detector on the Lunar 
Reconnaissance Orbiter will search for evidence of water ice and help 
understand astronauts' exposure to radiation during future trips to 
the moon. The instrument will map concentrations of hydrogen that may 
be found on and just beneath the lunar surface. 

Roscosmos' Dynamic Albedo of Neutrons instrument on the Mars Science 
Laboratory will measure hydrogen to analyze neutrons interacting with 
the Martian surface. The principal investigator for both instruments 
is Igor Mitrofanov of the Institute for Space Research of the Russian 
Academy of Science.

"Russia's contribution to the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and Mars 
Science Laboratory missions continues a rich and long-standing 
tradition of cooperation between NASA and Russia for scientific 
research in space," Griffin said. "The Institute for Space Research 
has a track record of delivering excellent instrumentation, and we 
are delighted to have international participation on these missions 
to explore the moon and send a robotic laboratory to Mars."

The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will circle the moon for at least a 
year, obtaining measurements necessary to identify future robotic and 
human landing sites. It also will look for potential lunar resources 
and document aspects of the lunar radiation environment. 

The Mars Science Laboratory rover is a mobile research platform that 
will explore a local region of the Martian surface as a potential 
habitat for past or present life. The rover will carry a suite of 
highly capable analytic and remote sensing instruments to investigate 
planetary processes that influence habitability, including the role 
of water.

For more about NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter mission and the 
Mars Exploration Program, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

	
-end-



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