. •
Carle M. Pieters,
Brown University – PI (
principal investigator) • Joe Boardman, Analytical Imaging and Geophysics, LLC • Bonnie Buratti,
JPL • Roger Clark,
USGS • Robert Green, JPL •
Jim Head, Brown University • Sarah Lundeen,
JPL – Instrument Ground Data System • Erick Malaret, ACT • Tom McCord,
University of Hawaii •
Jack Mustard, Brown University • Cass Runyon,
College of Charleston • Matt Staid,
Planetary Science Institute • Jessica Sunshine,
University of Maryland • Larry Taylor,
University of Tennessee • Stefanie Tompkins,
SAIC • Padma Varanasi,
JPL – Mission Operations
Water discovered on Moon . On September 24, 2009,
Science magazine reported that
NASA's Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) on Chandrayaan-1 had detected water on the Moon. But, on 25 September 2009,
ISRO announced that the
MIP, another instrument on-board Chandrayaan-1 also had discovered water on the Moon just before impact and had discovered it before M3. The announcement of this discovery was not made until NASA confirmed it. M3 detected absorption features near 2.8–3.0 μm on the surface of the Moon. For silicate bodies, such features are typically attributed to
OH- and/or
H2O-bearing materials. On the Moon, the feature is seen as a widely distributed absorption that appears strongest at cooler high latitudes and at several fresh feldspathic craters. The general lack of correlation of this feature in sunlit M3 data with
neutron spectrometer H abundance data suggests that the formation and retention of OH and H2O is an ongoing surficial process. OH/H2O production processes may feed polar cold traps and make the lunar regolith a candidate source of volatiles for human exploration. The Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3), an imaging spectrometer, was one of the 11 instruments on board Chandrayaan-I that came to a premature end on August 29. M3 was aimed at providing the first mineral map of the entire lunar surface. Lunar scientists have for decades contended with the possibility of water repositories. They are now increasingly "confident that the decades-long debate is over," a report says. "The moon, in fact, has water in all sorts of places; not just locked up in
minerals, but scattered throughout the broken-up
surface, and, potentially, in blocks or sheets of ice at depth." The results from the NASA's
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter are also "offering a wide array of watery signals." The detailed analysis of the full set of Moon Mineralogy Mapper data in 2018 has yielded multiple locations with water ice concentrations at the surface ranging from 2% to 30%, at latitudes above 70 degrees. Surprisingly, some of the known "cold traps", including the impact site of the
LCROSS spent stage, have failed to detect surface ice. == Mg-spinel-rich rock discovered ==