Smackdown: NASA probes about to connect with one-two uppercuts of moon’s south pole

By Seth Borenstein, AP
Friday, October 9, 2009

NASA to moon: Get ready because here we come

WASHINGTON — Two NASA spacecraft are barreling toward the moon at twice the speed of a bullet, about to crash Friday into a lunar crater in a search for ice.

“Everything is working so very well,” NASA’s Victoria Friedensen, a manager in NASA’s exploration office, said minutes before the planned one-two smack into the moon’s south pole.

If all continues to go well, the impact will be beamed back live to Earth.

The first and much bigger crash is set for 7:31 a.m. EDT (1131 GMT). That’s when an empty rocket that weighs 2.2 tons should hit the crater Cabeus and create a minicrater about half the size of an Olympic pool. It should kick up a plume of lunar debris about six miles (10 kilometers) high.

The idea is to confirm the theory that water — a key resource if people are going to go back to the moon — is hidden below the barren moonscape.

Trailing behind the rocket is the lunar probe LCROSS, short for Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite and pronounced L-Cross, beaming back to Earth live pictures of the impact and the debris plume using color cameras. It will scour for ice, fly through the debris cloud and then just four minutes later take the fatal plunge itself, triggering a dust storm one-third the size of the first hit.

Telescopes around the world — including the orbiting Hubble Space Telescope — will aim their cameras at the big event to provide more views of the dust-up.

LCROSS and its bigger rocket stage launched together last June and only separated Thursday night, the last major milestone before the big crash.

The lunar minidemolition derby will be broadcast live on NASA television. Museums and observatories planned early morning events to show the crashes, which can be seen with backyard telescopes in the predawn darkness west of the Mississippi River. But the best place to watch the lunar action will be on the Internet, scientists said.

“It’s going to be a muted shimmer of light,” said Anthony Colaprete, an LCROSS scientist.

The LCROSS probe cost $79 million and was an add-on to a bigger NASA satellite now circling the moon.

On the Net:

NASA’s LCROSS site: www.nasa.gov/mission(underscore)pages/LCROSS/main/index.h ml

Where to observe crash: www.nasa.gov/mission(underscore)pages/LCROSS/impact/index html

How to view with telescope: lcross.arc.nasa.gov/observation/amateur.htm

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