02.02.07
NASA
Moon-Impactor Mission Passes Major Review
WASHINGTON - NASA's drive to return astronauts to the moon and later
probe deeper into space achieved a key milestone recently when
agency officials approved critical elements of a moon impact
mission scheduled to launch in October 2008. NASA's unmanned
Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, known as LCROSS,
will strike the moon near its south pole in January 2009. It
will search for water and other materials that astronauts could
use at a future lunar outpost.
Scott Horowitz, associate administrator of the agency's Exploration
Systems Mission Directorate, led a confirmation review panel that recently
approved the detailed plans, instrument suite, budget and risk factor
analysis for the satellite.
NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., manages the mission.
The mission is valued at $79 million, excluding launch costs. The mission
will help NASA gain a new foothold on the moon and prepare for new
journeys to Mars and beyond.
The confirmation review authorized continuation of the lunar impactor
project and set its cost and schedule. Another mission milestone, the
critical design review, is scheduled for late February. That review
will examine the detailed Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite
system design. After a successful critical design review, the project
team will assemble the spacecraft and its instruments.
"
The Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite project represents
an efficient way of doing business by being cost capped, schedule constrained
and risk tolerant," said Daniel Andrews, project manager at Ames
for the lunar impactor mission.
The lunar impactor will share a rocket ride into space with a second
satellite, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. After the orbiter separates
from the Atlas V launch vehicle for its own mission, the LCROSS will
use the spent Centaur upper stage of the rocket as a 4,400-pound lunar
impactor, targeting a permanently shadowed crater near the lunar South
Pole.
According to scientists, the Centaur's collision with the moon will
excavate about 220 tons of material from the lunar surface. The Lunar
Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite will observe the plume of
material with a suite of six instruments to look for water ice and
examine lunar soil. The satellite will fly through the plume, also
impacting the lunar surface. That second impact will be observed from
Earth.
The prime contractor for the satellite is Northrop Grumman Space Technologies
of Redondo Beach, Calif.