Nasa Moon  Base And Food



Kindle: Amazon's New Wireless Reading Device

Nasa Moon Base And Food


 

Nasa moon bombing in search of water

Soon after taking off, LCROSS used gravity to slingshot itself into a wide orbit around the Earth that would eventually put it on its collision course.

As it closes in on the moment of impact, the craft will divide in two. The fuel tank will detach from the body of the main LCROSS unit - which, stuffed with cameras and sensing equipment, acts as the mission's brain.

The first impact takes place on Oct 9, 2009 at 4:30 a.m. US PDT (7:30 a.m. US EDT, 10:30pm AEDT) with the second 4 minutes later.

Rocket will hit the moon at a speed of nine thousand miles per hour, which is more than seven times the speed of sound. The impact will be equivalent to the power of 1.5 tonnes of TNT, releasing 350 thousand kilograms of lunar dust. Impact will create the 6.2 mile high cloud of dust, in which scientists will search for the remains of water.

A source of water on the Moon could provide hydrogen for fuel, and assist in the establishment of a permanent moon base.

QUICK POLL

Do you agree with NASA's plan to bombing the moon?

A) YES
B) NO

(Vote for your chance to win a $1, 500 Gas Card)

Watching the event:

Amateur astronomy buffs with telescopes who live west of the Mississippi may try to catch a glimpse of it through their own instruments because it will still be dark outside. People who live in areas where it will be daylight won't be able to see it from home telescopes.

You can watch a live stream of the NASA Moon bombing on NASA TV or via the SLOOH telescope system.


Article Source: ArticlesBase.com

Next page: Pictures Of The Future Moon Base


Bookmark/Share This Page:


Bookmark and Share


Nasa Moon Base And Food News


This Week @ NASA, February 3, 2012

3 Feb 2012 at 11:00am 
Read more...


Back to the Moon?For a Fraction of the Old Price - Wall Street Journal

2 Feb 2012 at 5:46pm 

Stuff.co.nz

Back to the Moon?For a Fraction of the Old Price
Wall Street Journal
By CHARLES MILLER As a former NASA executive, I am saddened by the media response to Newt Gingrich's proposal that we return to the moon. The mockery and ridicule does America a great disservice. Space exploration and development is an important ...
Charles Miller: To the moon, beyondFlorida Today
Experts say Gingrich moon base dreams not lunacymsnbc.com
Gingrich's space ambitions distract from real issuesUConn Daily Campus

all 105 news articles »


Read more...


Space Shuttle Era: M113

2 Feb 2012 at 11:00am  The space shuttle required a unique rescue vehicle, one strong enough to bull its way into a launch pad and carry a flight crew and firefighters to safety. The answer is a group of M113 armored personnel carriers.

Read more...


Return to the Moon -- Heavy Lift vs. Fuel Depots - Yahoo! Contributors Network

1 Feb 2012 at 1:08pm 

PhysOrg.com

Return to the Moon -- Heavy Lift vs. Fuel Depots
Yahoo! Contributors Network
MSNBC suggests that a return to the moon plan using fuel depots would cost $40 billion and take eight years as opposed to $105 billion and 10 years under the Constellation/heavy lift approach. The Houston Chronicle put the question of fuel depots vs.
Canada looks to the future in spacePhysOrg.com

all 104 news articles »


Read more...


  Home   Sitemap   Develop Your Domain Names