NASA is planning to send a lander and rover to the beautiful Gruithuisen Domes, seen in this controlled mosaic, and LROC images will help guide the way. The domes are located at 36.3° N, 319.8° E. Image 55 km wide, north is up . Credits: NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University
Adding to the growing list of commercial
deliveries slated to explore more of the Moon than ever before under Artemis, NASA has selected two new science instrument suites,
including one that will study the mysterious Gruithuisen Domes for the first
time.
These payload suites mark the second
selection through the agency’s Payloads and Research Investigations on the
Surface of the Moon (PRISM) call for proposals. Both payloads will be delivered
to the lunar surface on future flights through NASA’s Commercial Lunar
Payload Services (CLPS)
initiative, which is one part of the agency’s larger lunar exploration
architecture planned for this decade.
“The two selected studies will address
important scientific questions related to the Moon” said Joel Kearns, deputy
associate administrator for exploration in NASA’s Science Mission Directorate.
“The first will study geologic processes of early planetary bodies that are
preserved on the Moon, by investigating a rare form of lunar volcanism. The
second will study the effects of the Moon’s low gravity and radiation
environment on yeast, a model organism used to understand DNA damage response
and repair.”
The Lunar Vulkan Imaging and Spectroscopy
Explorer (Lunar-VISE) investigation consists of a suite of five instruments,
two of which will be mounted on a stationary lander and three mounted on a
mobile rover to be provided as a service by the CLPS vendor.
Over the course of 10 Earth days (one
lunar day), Lunar-VISE will explore the summit of one of the Gruithuisen Domes. These domes are suspected to have been
formed by a sticky magma rich in silica, similar in composition to granite. On
Earth, formations like these need oceans of liquid water and plate tectonics to
form, but without these key ingredients on the Moon, lunar scientists have been
left to wonder how these domes formed and evolved over time.
By analyzing the lunar regolith at the top
of one of these domes, the data collected and returned by Lunar-VISE’s
instruments will help scientists answer fundamental open questions regarding
how these formations came to be. The data also will help inform future robotic
and human missions to the Moon. Dr. Kerri Donaldson Hanna of the University of
Central Florida will lead this payload suite.
The second selected investigation, the
Lunar Explorer Instrument for space biology Applications (LEIA) science suite,
is a small CubeSat-based device. LEIA will provide biological research on the
Moon – which cannot be simulated or replicated with high fidelity on the Earth
or International Space Station – by delivering the yeast Saccharomyces
cerevisiae to the lunar surface and studying its response to radiation
and lunar gravity. S. cerevisiae is an important model of
human biology, especially in the areas of genetics, cellular and molecular
replication and division processes, and DNA damage response to environmental
factors such as radiation. The data returned by LEIA, in conjunction with
previously existing data from other biological studies, could help scientists
answer a decades-old question of how partial gravity and actual deep space
radiation in combination influence biological processes. Dr. Andrew Settles of
NASA’s Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley, California will lead the LEIA
payload suite.
With these selections in place, NASA will
work with the CLPS office at the agency’s Johnson Space Center in Houston to
issue task orders to deliver these payload suites to the Moon in the 2026
timeframe.
For these payload suites, the agency also
has selected two project scientists to coordinate science activities for the
selected instrument suites, including working with the payloads on landing site
selection, developing concepts of operations, and archiving science data
acquired during surface operations. Dr. John Karcz of NASA Ames Research Center
in California will coordinate the Lunar-VISE investigation suite for delivery
to the Gruithuisen Domes, and Dr. Cindy Young of NASA's Langley Research Center
in Hampton, Virginia, will coordinate the LEIA investigation suite for
delivery.
CLPS is a key part of NASA’s Artemis lunar
exploration plans. The science and technology payloads sent to the Moon’s
surface will help lay the foundation for human missions on and around the Moon.
The agency has made seven task order awards to CLPS providers for lunar
deliveries between in the early 2020s with more delivery awards expected
through 2028.
For more information, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/clps
Source: NASA
Selects New Instruments for Priority Artemis Science on Moon | NASA
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