Credits: NASA
As part of NASA’s regular cadence
of robotic lunar missions through Artemis, the agency has selected a new
scientific payload to establish the age and composition of hilly terrain
created by volcanic activity on the near side of the Moon.
The DIMPLE instrument suite, short
for Dating an Irregular Mare Patch with a Lunar Explorer, will investigate the
Ina Irregular Mare Patch, discovered in 1971 by Apollo 15 orbital images.
Learning more about this mound will address outstanding questions about
the evolution of the Moon, which in turn can provide clues to the history of
the entire solar system.
DIMPLE is the result of the third
annual proposal call for PRISM (Payloads and Research Investigations on the
Surface of the Moon), which sends science investigations to the Moon through a
NASA initiative called CLPS, or Commercial Lunar Payload Services. This PRISM
call was the first that allowed proposers to choose and justify a particular
landing site for conducting high-priority lunar science investigations.
“This commercial payload delivery
initiative is helping to provide a burst of lunar science and exploration,”
said Nicola Fox, associate administrator for science at NASA Headquarters in
Washington. “DIMPLE will add to a growing body of knowledge about the Moon,
which in turn helps us understand the origins of Earth and other planets in the
solar system. Additionally, the more we understand about our closest neighbor,
the more we can support long-term human exploration at the Moon, and someday,
Mars.”
The cost cap for the payload suite
is $50 million, and the delivery date is set for no earlier than the second
quarter of 2027. NASA expects to work on issuing a CLPS task order in 2024 to
determine the launch services to deliver DIMPLE to the Moon.
Such efforts are part of NASA’s
larger lunar plans – through Artemis, NASA will explore more of the Moon than
ever before with advanced robotics and astronauts.
The Moon is a rich destination for
scientific discovery. While some 70 Irregular Mare Patches have been discovered
by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, Ina remains the largest identified so
far.
DIMPLE will help determine whether
Irregular Mare Patches formed from recent or ancient volcanic processes. The
mission will make use of a CLPS-provided rover, a collection gripping
instrument, and a spectrometer that can help determine composition of the lunar
material to analyze the age and composition of samples collected from the
surface of Ina. DIMPLE will be able to collect and analyze anywhere from three
to more than 25 samples to learn more about the timing of the volcanic activity
that formed this feature. For example, if the volcanic activity turns out to be
geologically recent, it implies that either the lunar mantle was warmer than previously
thought, or that radioactive elements contributed to small-scale eruptions
continuing later in lunar evolution than previously thought. Either scenario
would help us better understand the geochemical state of the Moon over time.
If, on the other hand, the eruptions creating Ina turn out to be older, it
would lead to reevaluating the age and evolution of craters on the Moon – which
would have implications for understanding the history of Earth and other
planets in the solar system.
"With the selection of DIMPLE,
we aim to definitively resolve the debate on how recently the Moon was
volcanically active,” said Joel Kearns, deputy associate administrator for
exploration in NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. “Not only is this a
scientifically intriguing enigma that will fundamentally change our
understanding of lunar thermal evolution, but this is also the demonstration of
an exciting technology that can be used to measure absolute ages of a variety
of geologic terrains across the solar system."
The principal investigator for the DIMPLE mission is F. Scott Anderson of Southwest Research Institute’s Solar System Science and Exploration Division, which is located in Boulder, Colorado. The CLPS initiative is a key part of NASA’s Artemis lunar exploration efforts. By taking advantage of commercial launch providers, NASA can perform cutting-edge science at the Moon in a more cost-effective way. The science and technology payloads sent to the Moon’s surface as part of the initiative will help lay the foundation for the next human missions.
For more information, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/clps
Source: New NASA Artemis Instruments to Study Volcanic Terrain on the Moon | NASA
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