A NASA mission to study the moon from crust to core has completed
its prime mission earlier than expected. The team of NASA's Gravity
Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) mission, with twin probes named
Ebb and Flow, is now preparing for extended science operations starting
Aug. 30 and continuing through Dec. 3, 2012.
The GRAIL mission has gathered unprecedented detail about the
internal structure and evolution of the moon. This information will
increase our knowledge of how Earth and its rocky neighbors in the inner
solar system developed into the diverse worlds we see today.
Since March 8, the spacecraft have operated around the clock for 89
days. From an orbit that passes over the lunar poles, they have
collected data covering the entire surface three times. An instrument
called the Lunar Gravity Ranging System onboard each spacecraft
transmits radio signals that allow scientists to translate the data into
a high-resolution map of the moon's gravitational field. The spacecraft
returned their last data set of the prime mission today. The
instruments were turned off at 10 a.m. PDT (1 p.m. EDT) when the
spacecraft were 37 miles (60 kilometers) above the Sea of Nectar.
"Many of the measurement objectives were achieved from analysis of
only half the primary mission data, which speaks volumes about the skill
and dedication of our science and engineering teams," said Maria Zuber,
principal investigator of GRAIL at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology in Cambridge. "While there is a great deal of work yet to be
done to achieve the mission's science, it's energizing to realize that
what we traveled from Earth to the moon for is right here in our hands."
"GRAIL delivered to Earth over 99.99 percent of the data that could
have been collected, which underscores the flawless performance of the
spacecraft, instrument and the Deep Space Network," said Zuber.
Both spacecraft instruments will be powered off until Aug. 30. The
spacecraft will have to endure a lunar eclipse on June 4. The eclipse
and the associated sudden changes in temperature and the energy-sapping
darkness that accompanies the phenomena were expected and do not concern
engineers about the spacecraft's health.
"Before launch, we planned for all of GRAIL's primary mission science
to occur between lunar eclipses," said David Lehman, project manager of
GRAIL from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "But
now that we have flown Ebb and Flow for a while, we understand them and
are confident they can survive these eclipses in good shape."
The extended mission goal is to take an even closer look at the
moon's gravity field. To achieve this, GRAIL mission planners will halve
their current operating altitude to the lowest altitude that can be
safely maintained.
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