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  • NASA Mission Seeks Lunar Air -

  • presented by Science@NASA

  • Back in the 60s and 70s,

  • Apollo astronauts circling the Moon

  • saw something that still puzzles researchers today.

  • About 10 seconds before lunar sunrise or lunar sunset,

  • pale luminous streamers would pop up over the gray horizon.

  • These 'twilight rays'

  • were witnessed by crewmembers of Apollo 8, 10, 15 and 17.

  • Back on Earth,

  • we see twilight rays all the time.

  • When the sun sets,

  • shafts of sunlight penetrate gaps in clouds,

  • shadows lance across the sky as the day ends in a rosy glow.

  • The 'airless Moon' shouldn't have such rays,

  • yet the men of Apollo clearly saw them.

  • A NASA spacecraft is going back to the Moon to investigate.

  • Slated for launch in Sept. 2013,

  • the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer

  • ('LADEE' for short)

  • will seek out twilight rays

  • and other mysteries of the lunar atmosphere.

  • 'Yes, the Moon does have an atmosphere,'

  • says Richard Elphic,

  • the project scientist for LADEE at NASA's Ames Research Center.

  • 'It's just much more tenuous than ours.'

  • The Moon's atmosphere is so flimsy-

  • about ten trillion times less dense than Earth's-

  • that a good sneeze would rip through it like a hurricane.

  • 'Lunar air' is a gossamer mix of argon-40,

  • which seeps out of the ground

  • due to radioactive decay in the lunar interior,

  • plus elements such as helium, sodium, and potassium,

  • sputtered off the lunar surface by solar wind

  • and micrometeoroids.

  • None of these gases appear in sufficient quantities, however,

  • to explain the twilight rays.

  • 'We're missing something,' says Elphic.

  • The missing piece might be dust.

  • When sunlight falls on the Moon,

  • solar UV radiation electrifies the unprotected topsoil,

  • possibly causing lightweight grains of moondust

  • to rise off the ground,

  • joining the gases already there.

  • 'This electrically charged dust

  • may be what the astronauts saw,' says Elphic.

  • LADEE's Lunar Dust Experiment

  • will collect and analyze dust in the Moon's atmosphere

  • to test this hypothesis.

  • Researchers have a special name

  • for atmospheres as fantastically thin as the Moon's:

  • an exosphere.

  • On Earth,

  • molecules in the thick air are constantly bumping into each other,

  • spreading pressure and heat in all directions.

  • In an exosphere, however,

  • molecules are so far apart they rarely collide.

  • 'Instead of bumping into each other,' says Elphic,

  • 'they bump into the lunar surface.'

  • Air molecules coming into contact with the moon's dusty surface

  • are expected to stick, briefly,

  • before moving on again.

  • Hop and stick, hop and stick.

  • At any given moment

  • millions of molecules could be hopping like bunnies

  • across every square inch of lunar terrain.

  • Ultraviolet, visible light,

  • and mass spectrometers on board LADEE

  • will inventory the molecules present

  • and determine how they behave.

  • 'The dusty, flimsy mix of atoms and molecules in the lunar atmosphere

  • is sure to have alien properties

  • that our experience on Earth has not prepared us to anticipate,'

  • says Elphic.

  • To find out,

  • LADEE will be working on a deadline.

  • On April 15th of next year,

  • the sunset-colored shadow of Earth

  • will envelop the Moon for a lunar eclipse.

  • It will be a grand sight from Earth,

  • but bad news for LADEE.

  • The spacecraft is solar powered

  • and requires sunlight to charge its batteries.

  • An eclipse could end the mission.

  • 'The current plan,' says Elphic,

  • 'is, before the eclipse,

  • to guide the spacecraft into the surface of the moon

  • for a final impact that we can study.

  • We'll be taking data until the very end.'

  • For more news about lunar mysteries--

  • airy and otherwise--

  • stay tuned to science.nasa.gov.

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