People say good things come to those who wait. NASA thinks 50 years is the right amount of time as it begins tapping into one of the last unopened, Apollo-era lunar samples to learn more about the Moon and prepare for a return to its surface.
Front from left, Drs.
Ryan Zeigler, Rita Parai, Francesca McDonald, Chip Shearer and back left from
left, Drs. Zach Sharp from University of New Mexico and Francis McCubbin,
Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science Division (ARES) astromaterials
curator look on in excitement as gas is extracted into the manifold after the
inner tube was pierced. Credits: NASA/James Blair
The sample is being opened at NASA’s Johnson
Space Center in Houston by the Astromaterials
Research and Exploration Science Division (ARES), which safeguards, studies, and
shares NASA’s collection of extraterrestrial samples. This work is being led by
the Apollo Next Generation Sample Analysis Program (ANGSA), a science team who aim to learn more about the
sample and the lunar surface in advance of the upcoming Artemis missions to the Moon’s South Pole.
“Understanding the geologic history and evolution of the Moon samples at
the Apollo landing sites will help us prepare for the types of samples that may
be encountered during Artemis,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator
of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. “Artemis aims to bring
back cold and sealed samples from near the lunar South Pole. This is an
exciting learning opportunity to understand the tools needed for collecting and
transporting these samples, for analyzing them, and for storing them on Earth
for future generations of scientists.
From left, Dr. Juliane Gross, Astromaterials Research and Exploration
Science Division (ARES) deputy Apollo curator, alongside Drs. Alex Meshik, and
Olga Pravdivtseva, from Washington University in St. Louis, begin a gas
extraction process using the manifold.
Saving some for later
When Apollo astronauts returned these samples around
50 years ago, NASA had the foresight to keep some of them unopened and
pristine.
“The agency knew science and technology would evolve
and allow scientists to study the material in new ways to address new questions
in the future,” said Lori Glaze, director of the Planetary Science Division at
NASA Headquarters. “The ANGSA initiative was designed to examine these
specially stored and sealed samples.”
The ANGSA 73001 sample is part of an Apollo 17 drive
tube sample collected by astronauts Eugene Cernan and Harrison “Jack” Schmitt
in December of 1972. The astronauts hammered a pair of connected 1.5-by-14-inch
tubes into the lunar surface to collect segments of rocks and soil from a
landslide deposit in the Moon’s Taurus–Littrow Valley. The astronauts then
individually sealed one drive tube under vacuum on the Moon before bringing
them back to Earth; only two drive tubes were vacuum sealed on the Moon in this
way, and this is the first to be opened. The other half of this drive tube,
73002, was returned in a normal (unsealed) container. The sealed tube has been
carefully stored in a protective outer vacuum tube and in an
atmosphere-controlled environment at Johnson ever since. The unsealed
segment was opened in 2019 and revealed an
interesting array of grains and smaller objects, known as rocklets, that lunar
geologists were eager to study.
Now, scientists are focusing attention on the sealed,
lower segment of the core. The temperature at the bottom of the core was
incredibly cold when it was collected, which means that volatiles (substances
that evaporate at normal temperatures, like water ice and carbon dioxide) might
have been present. They are particularly interested in the volatiles in these
samples from the equatorial regions of the Moon, because they will allow future
scientists studying the Artemis samples to better understand where and what
volatiles might be present in those samples.
From left, Dr. Juliane Gross, Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science Division (ARES) deputy Apollo curator, and Dr. Francesca McDonald, from ESA, take precise measurements from the piercing device prior to using the newly developed tool. Credits: NASA/James Blair
The amount of gas expected to be present
in this sealed Apollo sample is likely very low. If scientists can carefully
extract these gases, they can be analyzed and identified using modern mass
spectrometry technology. This technology, which has evolved to levels of
extreme sensitivity in recent years, can precisely determine the mass of
unknown molecules and use that data to precisely identify them. This not only
makes for improved measurements, but also means the collected gas can be
divided into smaller portions and shared with more researchers conducting
different kinds of lunar science.
NASA’s Ryan Zeigler, the Apollo sample curator, is
overseeing the process of extracting the gas and rock. It’s also Zeigler’s job
to properly prepare, catalog, and share the sample with others for research.
“A lot of people are getting excited,” said Zeigler.
“University of New Mexico’s Chip Shearer proposed the project over a decade
ago, and for the past three years, we’ve had two great teams developing the
unique equipment to make it possible.”
The device being used to extract and collect the gas,
called a manifold, was developed by Drs. Alex Meshik, Olga Pravdivtseva, and
Rita Parai from Washington University in St. Louis. Dr. Francesca McDonald
from the European Space Agency led a group in building the special tool to
carefully pierce the container holding the lunar sample without letting any gas
escape. Together, they’ve created and rigorously tested a one-of-a-kind system
to collect the extremely precious material – gas and solid – that is sealed
inside the containers.
On, Feb. 11, the team began the careful, months-long
process to remove the sample by first opening the outer protective tube and
capturing any gas inside. Zeigler and his team knew what gases should be present
inside the outer container and found everything was as expected. The tube
seemed to contain no lunar gas, indicating the seal on the inner sample tube
was still likely intact. On Feb. 23, the team began the next step: a multi-week
process of piercing the inner container and slowly gathering any lunar gases
thatre hopefully still inside.
After the gas extraction process is
finished, the ARES team will prepare to carefully remove the soil and rocks
from their container, likely later this spring.
Learn more about how NASA studies Apollo samples and other celestial bodies at: https://ares.jsc.nasa.gov
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Charlie Plain, NASA's Johnson Space Center
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/nasa-studies-new-50-year-old-lunar-sample-to-prep-for-return-to-moon
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