NASA'S Lunar Spacecraft Completes Exploration Mission Phase

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Sep. 15, 2010

Michael Braukus 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1979 
michael.j.braukus@xxxxxxxx 

Nancy Neal Jones 
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
301-286-0039 
nancy.n.jones@xxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 10-223

NASA'S LUNAR SPACECRAFT COMPLETES EXPLORATION MISSION PHASE

WASHINGTON -- NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, or LRO, will 
complete the exploration phase of its mission on Sept. 16, after a 
number of successes that transformed our understanding of Earth's 
nearest neighbor. 

LRO completed a one-year exploration mission in a polar orbit 
approximately 31 miles above the moon's surface. It produced a 
comprehensive map of the lunar surface in unprecedented detail; 
searched for resources and safe landing sites for potential future 
missions to the moon; and measured lunar temperatures and radiation 
levels. 

The mission is turning its attention from exploration objectives to 
scientific research, as program management moves from NASA's 
Exploration Systems Mission Directorate to the Science Mission 
Directorate at the agency's Headquarters in Washington. 

"LRO has been an outstanding success. The spacecraft has performed 
brilliantly," said Doug Cooke, associate administrator of the 
Exploration Systems Mission Directorate. "LRO's science and 
engineering teams achieved all of the mission's objectives, and the 
incredible data LRO gathered will provide discoveries about the moon 
for years to come." 

The LRO team will continue to send data gathered during the last year 
to the Planetary Data System, which archives and distributes 
scientific information from NASA planetary missions, astronomical 
observations and laboratory measurements. 

By the time LRO achieves full mission success in March, and its data 
is processed and released to the scientific community, it will have 
sent more information to the Planetary Data System than all other 
previous planetary missions combined. During its new phase of 
discovery, LRO will continue to map the moon for two to four more 
years. 

"The official start of LRO's science phase should write a new and 
intriguing chapter in lunar research," said Ed Weiler, associate 
administrator for the Science Mission Directorate. "This mission is 
one more asset added to NASA's vast science portfolio." 

The spacecraft launched from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida 
carrying a suite of seven instruments on June 18, 2009. LRO formally 
began its detailed survey of the moon in September 2009. 

Results from the mission include: new observations of the Apollo 
landing sites; indications that permanently shadowed and nearby 
regions may harbor water and hydrogen; observations that large areas 
in the permanently shadowed regions are colder than Pluto; detailed 
information about lunar terrain; and the first evidence of a globally 
distributed population of thrust faults that indicates the moon has 
recently contracted and may still be shrinking. 

LRO also took high resolution pictures of the Lunokhod 1 rover that 
had been lost for almost 40 years. The rover, which carries a 
retroreflector, was located to within approximately 150 feet. The 
accurate position data enabled researchers on Earth to bounce laser 
signals off the retroreflector for the first time ever. The 
retroreflector is providing important new information about the 
position and motion of the moon. 

LRO also supported the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite 
impact, a companion mission sent to determine if the moon's poles 
harbor water ice, by helping to select a promising impact site. LRO 
observed both the expanding plume that arose after the impact and the 
evolving temperature at the site. 

NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., built and 
manages LRO for the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate. The 
Institute for Space Research in Moscow provides the neutron detector 
aboard the spacecraft. For more information about LRO, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov/lro   

	
-end-



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