Showing posts with label LPI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LPI. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Disrupted Terrain at the Antipodes of Young Great Basins

A new study of areas diametrically opposite from the Moon's youngest basins goes beyond crustal magnetic fields and swirl albedo features found at these focal points and proposes examples of highly modified terrain. Animation from preliminary lunar crust thickness maps prepared from GRAIL (2012) data by the Science Visualization Studio. [NASA/GSFC].
Joel Raupe
Lunar Pioneer

Studying the lunar magnetic anomalies and albedo swirls nested near the antipodes, at those points that are absolute opposite on the Moon from its youngest basins, can be a little disorienting. The antipodes of the two most familiar nearside basins Mare Imbrium and Mare Serenitatis, for example, are also near the mountainous northwest and northern border region of the vast (and more ancient) South Pole-Aitken (SPA) basin.

Such simple facts as these, derived during the relatively short history of modern lunar exploration, camouflage a variety of unknowns and complexities, as well as some controversy over the origin of the peculiar features discovered there.

Within ten degrees of the farside coordinates diametrically opposite from the officially designated center of Mare Imbrium, close to the surface, is a fairly well-known local magnetic field. Associated with this crustal magnetism is one of the Moon's most familiar tracings of delicate and bright albedo "swirls," apparently composed of a very thin layer of fine dust of the sort of low optical maturity, a signature of the Moon's youngest features draped over its oldest.

Like some kind of alien graffiti, these swirls really stand out as attributes of Mare Ingenii, the largest lava-flooded plain on the farside, a hemisphere almost as devoid of "seas" as the Moon's Earth-facing side is covered by them.

The Ingenii swirl fields are a highlight of anyone's tour of the Moon. To start considering these giant swirls traced over the surface of Ingenii as integral to Mare Imbrium on the Moon's nearside can sometimes seem like reading through a mirror.

Mare Imbrium is probably the most easily detected 'naked-eye feature' of the tidally-bound Earth-facing hemisphere. Centered officially by the IAU at 34.72°N, 345.09°E, the corresponding, though still preliminary, antipode for the Imbrium basin should be near 34.72°S,165.09°E, on the farside's southern hemisphere.

The antipode of Mare Imbrium (yellow spot) was a foci of conjoining seismic shock and ejecta from the epoch-changing basin-forming impact that hollowed out Mare Imbrium, roughly 3.85 billion years ago. Persistent bright surface markings that have lasted beyond the 800 million to 1 billion years thought to inevitably darken lunar regolith are thought to be the result of a cyclical interaction of charged lunar dust precipitating through the locally intense magnetic field. The white rectangle outlines one of many areas of disrupted terrain, "material of grooves and mounds" identified on the geological map of Stuart-Alexander (1978). LROC Wide Angle Camera (WAC) monochrome mosaic [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
When we think of the clusters of features often found together near these points directly opposite from the Moon's nearside basins it's often easier to label Mare Ingenii as Imbrium Antipode, and the Gerasimovich region as Crisium Antipode, etc.

This unconventional labeling emerges as we study a whole family of, literally, "far-flung phenomena," though most of the species, fortunately, are not yet associated with a local name. Unlike the more easily spotted features at Mare Ingenii, now thought to have originated with Mare Imbrium, such features elsewhere are less easily picked out, overlapping widely differing terrains and a variety of mountain ranges, plains and crater groups.

A very distinctive bifurcated swirl, one of many similar, striking aspects of Mare Ingenii, on the Moon's farside and immediately adjacent to the antipode of Mare Imbrium. From an oblique LROC NAC observation M191830503R, LRO orbit 13304, May 16, 2012 [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
The point on the Moon opposite Mare Serenitatis is not as distinctive (see image below). The coordinates were easy enough to determine, like the Imbrium Antipode it's just inside the circumference of SPA basin, a little north and east the antipode of Imbrium as Serenitatis basin, on the nearside, is a little south and east of Imbrium.

Like most of the farside, however, there is no mare-inundated plain near the Serenitatis antipode to allow for a clear photographic contrast with local differences in albedo. The crustal magnetism (or the granularity of our data) seems more diffuse, with smaller, less intense knots of crust magnetism.

The absence on the Moon of the kind of global magnetic field that affords life so much welcome protection here on Earth was one of the earliest conclusions of modern lunar exploration. As men and machines transited to and from the surface, however, the magnetic picture became more complex. The earliest magnetometers, in orbit and on the surface, were detecting magnetic signatures bound to local features, but their local intensity and apparent close association of with surfaces that seemed to defy aging were only beginning to be grasped.

The Serenitatis Antipode is not as easy for the naked eye to pick out from the background as points opposite the Imbrium basin associated with Mare Ingenii. The antipode of Serenitatis is marked with a cross in frame one (Figure 5 from the study by Hood, et al (2013). In that same frame the authors draw attention to mountains along the rim of SPA basin (white arrows) as possible examples of terrain disrupted by the Serenitatis basin-forming impact here near the opposite point on the Moon. The frame following draws attention to two anomalous optically immature surface areas within Galois Q crater, followed by Clementine color ratio analysis where the older terrain (red) surface areas stand out with characteristics of new (blue) and reflective regolith fines. The twin patches coincide with a local magnetic field strength "bump" measuring 9nT. The final frame shows the same albedo patches at 77 meters resolution in LROC Wide Angle Camera (WAC) observation M160959807C (604 nm), spacecraft orbit 8854, May 25, 2011, angle of incidence 62° from 60 km [NASA/USGS/DOD/GSFC/Arizona State University].
As the Apollo era came to an end it was understood, at least, that the Moon seemed once to have had an internal dynamo like Earth, generating global magnetism fossilized today in its rocks. A higher resolution picture of the Moon's magnetism and its interrelation with the Sun, Earth and its own dust would wait for a second very slowly renewed period of unmanned exploration beginning with vehicles like the DOD remote sensing test platform Clementine (1994).

At the close of the 20th century the remarkable Lunar Prospector (1998-1999) helped add important pieces to the picture. Specifically, the small vehicle returned highly valued data on the Moon's local magnetic fields very close to the surface, as it was gradually lowered toward a planned impact within the permanently shadowed Shoemaker crater, a feature of the far lunar south today baring the name of the celebrated pioneer Gene Shoemaker (1928-1997) who originally planned the impact that inspired the LCROSS mission ten years later.

Investigators have continued to correct and tease valuable information from the sparse Lunar Prospector magnetometer data to this day. The data sometimes allowed identifying lunar features in a manner opposite than before. Reiner Gamma, the most familiar swirl phenomena in Oceanus Procellarum, stands out in low power telescopes. Its associated crustal magnetism was identified later. Elsewhere on the nearside magnetometer data from as few as one to three late mission low orbital passes by Lunar Prospector allowed diffuse albedo patches at Airy and Descartes to be definitively associated with locally intense crustal magnetism and identified as true "swirl phenomena."

Figure 9 from Hood, et al (2013) - Superposition of the two-dimensionally filtered magnetic field magnitude at approximately 25 km altitude (Lunar Prospector), contour interval 1 nano-Tesla, onto LROC WAC mosaic of the nearside, in the south-central highlands vicinity of the Apollo 16 landing site.
Simulated oblique view over ancient Descartes crater (29 km - 11.74°S, 15.66°E), from the Cayley Formation plains explored by Young and Duke on the Apollo 16 expedition (1972) in the northwest around 80 km southeast over the "disrupted terrain" of the Descartes Formation, highlighting its anomalous albedo, not coincidentally at the heart of one of the Moon's most intense crustal magnetic fields. LROC WAC mosaic, from observations collected in three sequential orbital passes December 3, 2011, averaging 52 meters resolution from 38 km - Figure 5 from "Boulder 668 at Descartes C," July 17, 2012 [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
At Orientale Antipode, opposite from what is the Moon's unequivocally youngest basin, the swirl field is very widespread, associated with more than a few peaks in local crustal magnetism. The largest affected feature on the opposite side of the Moon from Mare Orientale is Mare Marginis, characterized by what is likely the Moon's largest and most complex field of swirls at the surface, overlapping every kind of terrain, but also closely identified with the Goddard and Goddard A crater. Still, the actual boundaries of this field of 'persistent albedo patterns' are difficult to trace.

Adding to this complexity, the swirl field near Orientale Antipode has been affected by relatively recent impacts, some with brightly reflective rays. The field is spread far enough east, extending over the farside's mid-latitudes, it's difficult to say with certainty whether an unnamed, tightly wound spectacular swirl field east of Firsov crater belongs to the group.

The Orientale Antipode (near Goddard A) is characterized by very widespread swirls. The greater manifestation (large oval) extends far from the pronounced magnetic field lines of peak strength near Hubble, Goddard and Goddard A craters east nearly to a distant and weaker peak field strength associated with the spectacular field of swirls seemingly spilling out from a bright unnamed Copernican crater east of Firsov (4.204°N, 112.697°E). LROC WAC global 100 meter mosaic [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Three investigators with established planetary science resumes which include (among many other things) peer-reviewed study of these bright swirl 'patterns' and associated lunar magnetic anomalies, have recently authored a new study building on continued fine-tuning of Lunar Prospector (1998-1999) magnetometer data and the more recent Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) Wide Angle Camera (WAC) surveys.

The new paper, published in the Journal of Geophysical Research, “Origin of Strong Lunar Magnetic Anomalies: More Detailed Mapping and Examination of LROC Imagery in Regions Antipodal to Young Large Basins,” demonstrates further the recent end to a long controversy, helping answer the Space Age mystery posed by the Moon’s delicate, bright, often sinuous surface albedo patterns.

A crew member on-board Apollo 10 almost managed to capture the full length of the magnificent but unnamed surficial albedo swirl field now associated with a measurable peak in crustal magnetism east of Firsov crater. AS10-30-4365 [NASA].
As with most controversies on the long climb of science, a quiet resolution drew upon bits and pieces collected in pursuit of answers to many, often unrelated, questions.

Launched in early 1998, Lunar Prospector spent 19 months in a low polar orbit and became notorious for a remarkably low budget and high return of valued data as much as for improved mapping of the scattered neutron absorption strongly hinting at the presence of volatiles, specifically hydrogen, prematurely ruled out following early analysis of Apollo samples in 1969.

In 2013 terms, for the amount of money the federal government collects, borrows and spends every eight and a half minutes Lunar Prospector gained a well-deserved reputation and confirmed still skeptically-received indications of the presence of hydrogen, both inside and outside the permanently shadowed regions of the Moon’s polar latitudes.
“Will your grace command me any service to the world's end?  I will go on the slightest errand now, to the Antipodes that you can devise to send me on…”
- Much Ado About Nothing, (Act II, scene 2)
The planned mission-ending impact of Lunar Prospector on the permanently shadowed floor of Shoemaker crater, near the Moon’s South Pole, July 30, 1999 (a long-shot, ultimately unsuccessful attempt to send up a plume of volatiles detectable from Earth), inspired the very successful LCROSS mission, launched together with LRO, a decade later.

With its neutron spectrometer, mapping the absence, the absorption, of scattered neutrons indicative of hydrogen, possibly water ices, near the lunar poles, Lunar Prospector also deployed a sensitive magnetometer.

The Moon’s lack of an Earth-like global magnetic field was well known, though Apollo and Luna surface samples clearly indicated the Moon may once have had the kind of molten internal dynamo at its core we take for granted on Earth, a now-dormant generator sufficient for global magnetism, its signature locked into the lineup direction of certain materials as volcanic rock cooled in its earliest ages, some of these as much as a billion years apart. The magnetic fields detected at the surface and from orbit, speculation held, were likely fossilized remnants, surviving islands – though the presence of “lunar magnetic anomalies” on the Moon’s Farside, in concentrations near opposite on the Moon (antipodal) from the Nearside’s large basins was seen as an unlikely coincidence very early in post-Apollo studies.

Along with anomalous local crustal magnetism detected near the Moon’s most famous “swirl,” the alluring Reiner Gamma, bright against the darker background of Oceans Procellarum, and the presence of swirls, some of them spectacular, in vicinity of these islands of knotted magnetic field lines - at the antipodes of Mare Imbrium and Serenitatis - was impossible to ignore.

Very near the Antipodes of Mare Imbrium in particular, the earliest photographs of the Moon’s Farside unveiled a spectacular swirl “field,” seeming almost intelligent in origin, Minimalist butterflies or spiders, strange forms seemed lightly painted in white on the darker floor of the melt-inundated basin floor of Mare Ingenii, by some inscrutable giant almost evoking the walls and ceilings of the cave of Lascaux, or the Nazca Lines.

“Swirls” seem immune from “optical maturity,” an inevitable darkening (really reddening) by solar and cosmic radiation. Incessant bombardment should inevitably weather fade such contrast to match its surroundings, on a timescale between 800 million to 1 billion years.

Had there had been any indication the bright patterns were composed of rough, fresh and reflectively bright small ejecta, like the rays of young 109 million year old Tycho, for example, a predictable cycle of meteorite and micro-meteorite “gardening” turns over the upper 3 centimeters of the entire lunar surface each two million years. Space weather, therefore, should have contributed to their erasure. It was a strong argument for direct, or lacking any difference in the crater counts inside and outside the swirls, indirect encounters with comets.

The comet encounter theory for the origin of lunar swirls died hard. Proponents pointed to the optical immaturity, the undeniably fresh material of the brighter surface, and claimed this to be evidence that outweighed other factors.

The predominance of Farside swirls gathered near places opposite from the Nearside basins and in the presence of coincident local crustal magnetism, they wrote, pointed perhaps to relatively recent and oblique encounters with comets interacting electro-chemically with these unusual conditions. The still-interesting fact that Reiner Gamma, and two lesser known magnetic anomalies with accompanying bright albedo patches on the Nearside seemed to lack any identified basins at their opposing antipodes on the Farside, they claimed, was also exceptional.

As the recorded readings measured from the Lunar Prospector magnetometer were gradually corrected, properly matched with time, the pressures of sunlight, etc., over many years following the end of that mission in 1999, researchers began discovering, or confirming, the existence of swirls after first deciphering the location of smaller, though sometimes intense, magnetic fields.

Ironically, the most intense magnetic field detected by any of the Apollo surface expeditions, that of Apollo 16, was measured only 80 km northwest of possibly the most intense crustal magnetism on the Moon, together with the amorphous small brighter surface material of the Descartes Formation. John Young and Charlie Duke walked on the northwestern edge of this feature when sampling the Cinco craters on “Stone Mountain,” overlooking South Ray crater, in April 1972.

The Lunar Prospector magnetometer survey of the Moon made for an improvement on earlier maps, but the mission was not comprehensive. Its advantage, at the time, was an unprecedented low orbit, an orbital altitude gradually lowering more and more as the vehicle approached its demise. The data had an inherent high degree of accuracy because of improvements in electronics and hardened electronics since the Apollo era, and a value-added accuracy due to the patience and hard work of investigators properly pegging the to geography and time, in filtering out the noise long after Lunar Prospector was gone.

Much of what is now known about the lunar magnetic anomaly on the Descartes highland hugging the northern edge of ancient Descartes crater, was teased from its measurements taken through three late mission orbits, when Lunar Prospector orbited some 32 km first over the east, and in the next orbit passing directly over Descartes, and last over the west.

Hood and Richmond, authors of this latest study, published their examination of the Lunar Prospector encounter with Descartes in 2003, determining the intensity of the very local magnetic field sufficient to refract the solar wind, dubbing it a “mini-magnetosphere.”

At nearly the same time, similarly strong local magnetic anomalies, though slightly less intense and localized, were shown embedded on the Farside at Gerasimovich, and perhaps elsewhere.

Some were quick to speculate, if a crustal magnetism centered on the Descartes formation were strong enough to refract the solar wind, perhaps such protection prevented the dusty surface of the bright “swirl” on the southern half of “Stone Mountain” from becoming “optically mature.”

The authors were quick to point out in their introductory paper even such an obviously intense local magnetic field offered no protections from heavier cosmic radiation. The depth of the cavity in the solar wind formed by Descartes magnetic anomaly was insufficient to stop highly energetic, and heavy, nucleons traveling – unlike the particles of a solar wind – close to the speed of light. They estimated such a purpose would require a magnetic field 2,000 km across just to begin deflecting highly energetic cosmic rays away from the surface within the fields. Naturally, such a field would have no effect on the patient and steady rain of micro-meteorites adding to the surface maturity.

Ignoring, for the moment, most magnetic anomalies with their attendant swirls are not sufficiently intense to carve out a transitory cavity in the solar wind, the authors demonstrated the most astonishingly enduring, and intense magnetic field ever detected near the lunar surface was no protection from space weathering.

By all rights, the surfaces within their influence should be darkening at or close to the same rate as the lunar surface elsewhere.

Enter Kaguya, Chandrayaan, LRO…

Toppography.

For decades the nature and the origin or the swirl patterns stirred very minor controversy, in planetary science communities. Those who insisted lunar swirls originated from comet encounters

Early in the Space Age investigators concluded our Moon, unlike Earth,

One place suggested as a possible location for samples of the SPA basin is northeast of Plato, where, between that famous crater and the long northern edge of Mare Frigoris, probability points toward the possible existence of a debris pile, the antipodes of the South Pole-Aitken basin.

In this latest study, Hood, Richmond and Spudis add granularity to our understanding the relationship between basin forming impacts and how they modify the landscape at the most remote points possible, as far away from Ground Zero as anyone can get, and remain on the Moon.

Anyone can meditate on Mare Imbrium, for example, and see how energetic the pressure wave, racing away from the center of the impact, scoured out mountains and channels and hurled away and dumped unimaginable masses of melt and solid debris many hundreds of kilometers away. The scar has not been erased, and a significant amount of debris must have been ejected at escape velocity. Much of that material eventually returned or settled elsewhere in the Solar System.

On February 15, 2013, as many in the far-flung world’s astronomy community were preparing to observe an exceptionally close fly-by of asteroid 2012 DA14, out of the glare of the pre-dawn over Central Asia a 7,000 ton, 15 meter-wide rock encountered Earth’s atmosphere at a relative speed of 18 km per second. Immediately flaring bright, it quickly exploded 20 km overhead. The event produced a shockwave into the atmosphere over Chelyabinsk that immediately imparted ten times the energy of the fission bomb exploded over Hiroshima in 1945. The sound of that smaller asteroid’s explosion traveled around the entire planet several times before seismic stations of the world could detect it no longer.

The pressure wave from the Chelyabinsk Event propagated in every direction away from the explosion until all points on the wave converged west-southwest of South America, where the far South Pacific borders the Great Southern Ocean encircling Antarctica. The momentum of the wave through the atmosphere carried past this convergence point, the Antipode of the Chelyabinsk Event, and continued racing away until a second convergence occurred many hours later, back over Russia, where the energy continued on toward the antipode a second time, and so on, like ripples in a pond – only the pond, in this case, was a planet, and its shoreline a single point on the opposite side of the world.


Related Posts:
Bubble, Bubble – Swirl and Trouble (July 19, 2012)
Boulder 668 at Descartes C (July 16, 2012)
LROC: The Swirls of Mare Ingenii (June 22, 2012)
Remnant magnetism hints at once-active lunar core (January 27, 2012)
Grand lunar swirls yielding to LRO Mini-RF (October 4, 2010)
Another look at Reiner Gamma (June 30, 2010)
LOLA: Goddard (June 26, 2010)
Depths of Mare Ingenii (June 16, 2010)
LROC: Ingenii Swirls at Constellation Region of Interest (May 26, 2010)
Local topography and Reiner Gamma (May 22, 2010)
Lunar swirl phenomena from LRO (May 17, 2010)
The still-mysterious Descartes formation (May 11, 2010)
Dust transport and its importance in the origin of lunar swirls (February 21, 2010)
The Heart of Reiner Gamma (November 17, 2009)
Moon’s mini-magnetospheres are old news (November 16, 2009)
MIT claim of solving ‘lunar mystery’ unfounded (January 15, 2009)

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Lunar Orbiter images last seen 47 years ago

Lunar Orbiter 2 frame 159 (H2), an approximately 4.5 by 6 kilometers stretch of lunar mare 250 km southwest of Copernicus. One of three high-resolution photographs swept up, developed, scanned and radioed back to Earth in 1966. The fully-restored, previously incomplete session has been restored by the Lunar Orbiter Image Restoration Project (LOIRP).
Keith Cowing
LOIRP

After being forgotten for nearly 47 years, three high resolution images taken by the Lunar Orbiter II spacecraft have been rediscovered by the Lunar Orbiter Image Recovery Project (LOIRP).

It is unlikely that anyone has seen these images since they were sent back to Earth. Indeed, it is unlikely that very many people saw them at that time either.

The three high resolution images were taken along with a medium resolution image on 23 November 1996 at 17:05:39 GMT. The center point of the images was 26.94 West Longitude, 3.196 degrees North Latitude. The images were taken at an altitude of 43.6 km and the image resolution is 0.93 meters.

Thumbnail of the medium resolution image, from the Lunar and Planetary Institute catalog. The area captured at high resolution in November 1966 is outlined at center. The area seen in "H2" above is outlined in yellow. This region is characterized by ejecta and secondary craters, primarily radiant from the Copernicus impact from 250 km northeast.
We recently came across these three images (#2159) and noticed that they do not appear online at the LPI Lunar Orbiter database. Only the medium resolution image gets mentioned at LPI.

These three images were retrieved from original Lunar Orbiter program analog data tapes yet they appear nowhere in NASA's publications. They do appear on microfilm archives at LOIRP and are mentioned in a simple data log online at LPI. LOIRP has a more extensive computer printout of this data that shows more detail about the images - but not the images themselves.

Among the highest resolution Wide Angle Camera images of the region, among LROC images thus far released to the Planetary Data System (PDS), the area of interest is smaller than a postage stamp, above the right (east) central edge of this 32.4 km-wide field of view from LROC Wide Angle Camera (WAC) observation M166025782C (604 nm), LRO orbit 9601, July 23, 2011; 62.86° angle of incidence, resolution 55.85 meters per pixel from 40.64 km [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Unless someone happened to be looking through this microfilm collection (LOIRP has the only extant copy) then it is pretty safe to assume that no one has actually seen these images since a technician saw them on a TV monitor in 1966.

Read the full article, catch up on the Lunar Orbiter Image Restoration Project,
and discover how you can help
, HERE.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Landing Site at Tycho North (Science Concept 7)

A Ready-Made Landing Site?   One among many 'flash-frozen' impact melt ponds, a flow over the rugged ejecta immediately north of Tycho crater halted in place 109 million years ago. This one is 800 meters long along its north-south axis, and apparently level, nested about half the distance between the 1968 unmanned Surveyor 7 lander and a geologically interesting breach on Tycho's rim. LROC Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) observation M111668133RE, LRO orbit 1590, October 31, 2009; resolution 51 cm per pixel, angle of incidence 47.88° photographed from 49.39 km [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Second in a series of posts highlighting newly-proposed lunar landing sites selected to address high-priority science goals - from a remarkable landing site study published by the Center for Lunar Science and Exploration (CLSE):

Another image, less close-up, of the proposed 'Tycho North' landing zone, at slightly less granular resolution (0.65 meters per pixel), the nominally level melt pond is visible in greater context, nested in the rough and debris-strewn Tycho ejecta. The local slope runs from east to west but, overall, lower north and away from 86.2 km Tycho. From a mosaic, LROC NAC M106950070LR, spacecraft orbit 901, September 7, 2009; from 63.18 km altitude, angle of incidence 45.55° [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Joel Raupe
Lunar Pioneer

On February 5 we discussed a proposed landing site in Amundsen crater selected to support "Science Concept 4" as outlined in the commissioned National Research Council (NRC) study The Scientific Context for the Exploration of the Moon (2007).

In this second of a planned series we move to an area north of Tycho visited by Surveyor 7 in 1968. Material from the region was also very likely sampled by Apollo 17 in 1972, as Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmidt explored Tortilla Flats in Taurus Littrow Valley, 2200 kilometers away.

While working with those same samples at the Johnson Space Center's Lunar Sample Laboratory Facility, Jack Schmidt soon helped estimate the age of samples collected at the base of South Massif directly opposite from Tycho at 109 million years. When the Tycho event happened, only 44 millions years remained before a similar impact ended the long reign of dinosaurs on nearby Earth. When offered as an example of the Moon's young craters the immense differences between terrestrial and lunar timescales and surface preservation rates are made stark. Such differences make it easy to forget that Earth and Moon have essentially shared the same location in the inner Solar System for 4.5 billion years (with Earth being a larger target and deeper gravity well). A study of the impact history and space weathering environment preserved on the Moon is a study of a much better preserved record of Earth's history.

This landing zone was proposed to address "Science Concept 7," a site that first presented to the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in 2012 (Abstract #1387), from work produced by the Lunar & Planetary Institute Summer Intern Program the previous year. More detail emerged in the final CLSE landing site study of each of the NRC's 2007 lunar science goals, last fall. The LPSC 2012 abstract and contribution to the final CLSE study are credited to director David A. Kring and LPI 2011 interns Sarah Crites, Agata Przepiórka, Stephanie Quintana, Claudia Santiago and Tiziana Trabucchi.

"Science Concept 7" outlined in the National Research Council's NASA-commissioned Scientific Context for the Exploration of the Moon (2007). The Center for Lunar Science and Exploration (CLSE) released "A Global Lunar Landing Site Study to Provide the Scientific Context for the Exploration of the Moon" in late 2012, an exhaustive study of possible landing sites selected to address NRC 2007 lunar science concepts and goals [CLSE/LPI/NLSI].
The sites appearing in the new CLSE study might be broadly separated into two sets, ranked lists of many possible landing sites picked to fulfill all or overlapping part of the goals under the Science Concepts or individual targets picked in hopes of addressing all goals within one Science Concept and possibly overlapping with one or more of the other Concepts.

In other words, the ranks of possible landing sites in the new study range from those picked to accomplish much within practical, logistical and budget constraints over the next two decades to a long list of sites that may require 50 to 100 years to directly sample, along with a few lists falling somewhere in between. This might be a reflection of the political changes occurring over the years since the study began, when renewed exploration and establishing an extended human presence on the Moon went from being National Space Policy to falling by the wayside.

The new study is highly useful, regardless. Along with the Lunar Impact Crater Database, an even more detailed picture of the origins, ages and compositions of the Moon's complex features has been coming into focus, reflecting the astounding range of detailed information about the Moon collected in recent years.

Another full resolution LROC NAC view of the proposed landing zone, from a mosaic of the left and right frames of LROC NAC observation M111668133LR, LRO orbit 1590, October 31, 2009; incidence angle 47.82° from 49.39 km [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Since the goal is to establish definitive baselines, the actual ground truth of the upper few centimeters of the Moon's surface, why land near Tycho, the 86.2 km-wide astrobleme (41.49°S, 348.23°E) that is so much younger than its counterparts from earlier eras that have long faded into the albedo background? As it turns out, it's precisely because of such notably pristine.conditions, a comparatively youthful impact upon a region older than Mare Imbrium, that led Kring and his colleagues to seek this place out - along with proximity with Surveyor 7.

Understanding the dynamics of the upper few centimeters of the Moon's surface, most of which is turned-over, or "gardened" every couple of million years - involves more than dust mitigation or the charging and levitation of sub-micron dust as it interacts with radiation from the Sun and deep space or the Moon's nested crustal magnetic fields. Researcher will need a better understanding of this blasted layer of fine particles on wildly different timescales.

A really outstanding oblique view shows the proposed Tycho North Landing Zone from up over a spot 100 km west of Tycho, offerring even more perspective on the complex terrain surrounding the target melt pond (near center). Inset (see rectangle below) from an oblique (59° east of nadir) LROC NAC mosaic of from LROC NAC M1101317790, LRO orbit 14632, September 3, 2012 [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Thumbnail of the entire LROC NAC M1101317790RLR mosaic shows the area of the target melt terrace (the field of view in the immediately preceding full-resolution crop is framed by the yellow rectangle) in relation with Surveyor 7 and the rim of Tycho, 20 km south (to the right). Incredibly - at full resolution - the Surveyor 7 lander is actually visible in the full image. A proposed science station on the rim of Tycho is just outside this view at lower right [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Up, over and just beyond Tycho's 1200 meter high rim, the proposed LZ pictured above sits roughly at 620 meters elevation above the lunar geode (near 41.49°S, 348.233°E), the Moon's mean elevation, just out of sight from the sharp 800 meter drop down the crater wall (check this). The familiar crater's complex ejecta blanket extends 110 km from the central peaks, and its famous rays, visible to the naked eye, extend past 2000 km.

Beyond the debris piled high on the Tycho rim, the area of interest north by northwest of the crater, is characterized by slopes from 4.5 to 6° - safe for manned and unmanned landers. The specific Landing Zone is approximately 20 km from the rim fall off, where ancient pre-impact regolith appears to be exposed in layers visible in LROC NAC photography.

Because Tycho excavated pre-Imbrium nearside Southern Highlands, "any paleoregolith layers in Tycho's walls will also have a pre-Imbrium age," Kring and his colleagues note.

"Tycho's crater walls are the best target for sampling," though the upper reaches of the mountainous rim between the landing zone and the crater wall retain slopes greater than 25° "a navigable route to access layered deposits can probably be found."


Clementine multi-spectral mosaic color-coding overlaid on LROC Wide Angle Camera (WAC) 100 meter global mosaic shows the Science Concept 7 proposed landing site (arrow) is near the border between two widely different surface compositions [NASA/GSFC/DOD/ASU].
"The site provides access to regolith produced from substrates of different compositions (see image above)," from the coherent melt pond of the landing site itself to "rubbly ejecta... in a highlands area far from" the unique Procellarum, Potassium and Rare Earth (PKT, or 'Procellarum KREEP') terrain, covering so much of the nearside's west quarter.

Because the Tortilla Flats formation, sampled by Apollo 17, and nearby Surveyor 7 sampled materials related to the Tycho impact event "we can leverage these previous missions to compare properties of regolith of the same age formed from different types of ejecta."

Fifty km-wide LROC WAC field of view barely hints at the complexity of the terrain around the rim of Tycho. The suggested "Science Concept 7" landing site is an equidistant 10 km 'walk-back' distance (as the orbiter flies) from the 1968 landing site of Surveyor 7 (the last unmanned U.S. lander) and a suggested science station, a rare, dramatic breech in the sharp wall of the 'young' 109 million year old crater. The peninsula of melt piled into a comma below and to the right of Surveyor, was shown at very high resolution in "Giant Flow of Tycho Impact Melt," LROC Featured Image released August 14, 2012. LROC WAC (M168272917-9335CE) monochrome (643nm) mosaic   [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
One of the best all-around LROC NAC images of Surveyor 7 (below left, arrow, and at full-resolution in the inset), from M150598504L, LRO orbit 7327, January 25, 2011; spacecraft and camera slew -15.17° from nadir, resolution 0.52 meters per pixel, angle of incidence 69° from 45 km. This roughly 300 meter wide field of view also includes another Tycho melt pond, the landing site Surveyor project manager Gene Shoemaker had hoped for as eventual landing site for this last vehicle of the program. The tripod lander's square sail, atop a supporting mast, casts a distinctive shadow [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Nearby Tycho's Rim - A possible breech in Tycho's high rim - within walking distance of the proposed Landing Zone, in the opposite direction from Surveyor 7 - may provide sampling access to the layered regolith visible above center-right. This angled corner on the north-northwest rim of Tycho was clearly modified very soon after the crater formed. Whether the slope below is too great to allow men and machines invaluable direct access to Tycho's equally interesting interior is still uncertain. LROC NAC mosaic M160029952LR   [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Some perspective to the proposed Science Concept 7 science station, on Tycho's rim (arrow) and the crater rim, wall and floor. Melt ponds dot the region. (In this oblique view, the landing zone and Surveyor 7 locations are outside this frame.) Still from video prepared from JAXA photography and data collected by the SELENE-1 (Kaguya) [JAXA/SELENE].
Establishing the rate and manner space weathering leads to the optical maturing (OMAT) of the Moon's surface will help researchers understand processes ranging from the interaction of reactive dust with crustal magnetism - the age and deposition rates of the Moon's swirl phenomena - the deposition of lunar volatiles and tighter estimates of the age of craters between one and two billion years old, past the time needed for optical maturity to do its work. 

Tycho, a recent rich excavation of the Moon's nearside Southern Highlands, and sights along a potentially valuable ingress to the crater's interior demonstrating the potential value of a single rather multiple expeditions. LROC WAC mosaic stitched from four sequential orbital overflights  LROC WAC (M168272917-9335CE) monochrome (643nm) mosaic   [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Remote sensing maturity maps hint the proposed landing site is characterized "by both very immature and intermediately mature soils," according to Kring and colleagues, "providing an opportunity to see the evolution of space weathering processes."
 
Proximity with Surveyor 7, about 20 km away, in the opposite direction from Tycho's rim, allows study of a known surface, and for a known amount of time (since 0600 UT, 7 January 1968), a stated goal in the NRC's 2007 commissioned report.
 
It's hoped the 20 km distance from the proposed landing site will prevent Surveyor 7, as a valuable 'long-duration exposure facility," from being undermined like Surveyor 3, ultimately swept clean by the descent of Apollo 12 only 183 meters away in 1969.Surveyor 7 may provide a "more pristine" baseline for measuring short-term space weathering.
 
The Tycho North landing site clear of any known crustal magnetism, free of space weathering processes both accelerated and slowed, as they appear to have been at Reiner Gamma, for example. Samples should therefore be "better representative of the lunar highlands."
 
The rate of solar-wind production of volatiles "can also be nicely calibrated here," Kring and his colleagues have noted, since "the exposure age is known and the orbital relationship between the Moon and the Sun is unlikely to have changed significantly over that period."
 
Chemical traces of the object that created Tycho Crater may be be found in the melt-rich rocks at the landing site, along with the shattered pieces of more distant and much older events in the 'recently' exposed paleoregolith uplifted in layers at Tycho's rim.

Some Related Posts:
Amundsen crater and the CLSE Landing Site Study (February 5, 2013)
Rippled Pond on Tycho's Wall (September 13, 2012)
Breached Levee at Tycho (September 11, 2012)
Giant Flow of Impact Melt (August 14, 2012)
River of Rock (June 20, 2012)
View from the Other Side (May 21, 2012)
Impact Melt Fingers (May 8, 2012)
Melt on a Rim (May 3, 2012)
Tycho Central Peak Spectacular (July 5, 2011)
Chaotic crater floor in Tycho (June 19, 2011)
Polygonal fractures on Tycho ejecta deposits (June 15, 2011)
Ejecta on slumped wall of Tycho (December 9, 2010)

When the Moon is full, Tycho's bright ray system is among the few lunar features visible to the naked eye. A testimony to its youth, a low degree of steady space weathering when compared to hundreds of similar but older crater,s from before the time when dinosaurs ruled the earth. The "miracle boys of Minsk" (Astronominsk) captured this local late morning image of Tycho, part of a full disk monochrome mosaic, captured from Belarus, September 20, 2010.  One of their fabulous color images of Тихо can be viewed HERE [Astronominsk].

Monday, March 18, 2013

Golden Spike and LPI schedule 2013 conference

Notional view of NASA's recently-abandoned Altair lunar lander, on a pad in the Moon's high northern latitudes formed from sintered regolith. Golden Spike Company announced in January Altair's designer Northrup Grumman to initiate design work on a manned lunar lander to return to the Moon by 2020.
The Golden Spike Company of Boulder, Colorado has announced an international workshop next October "to explore the kinds of landing sites, experiments, and geological traverses their astronauts should undertake on the Moon starting in 2020."

The two-day seminar will be held at the Lunar and Planetary Science Institute (LPI) in Houston, October 3-4, 2013.  

The program committee includes Alan Stern, Golden Spike CEO and President, Steve Mackwell of the Lunar and Planetary Institute, Clive Neal of Notre Dame, William McKinnon of Washington University, Amand Mahesh of Open University, Dr. Daniel Durda of the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) and James Carpenter of the European Space Agency.

“We’re excited to announce this workshop, which will seek input from lunar researchers from across the world regarding scientific priorities for Golden Spike expeditions, Stern said. "We also expect this workshop to multiply interest in our missions from science and space agencies across the globe.”

“It is great to be part of the beginning of a new age of space exploration where commercial entities step up as key enablers of manned exploration of the solar system, and it is so appropriate this first meeting will be held at the Lunar and Planetary Science Institute, with its roots in the Apollo era,” Mackwell added.

The workshop will consist of plenary and a poster sessions organized around topical themes, invited presentations, and discussion panels. Stern and Golden Spike’s board chair Gerry Griffin, former director of the Johnson Space Center in Houston, will offer a public presentation about Golden Spike, Thursday evening, October 3.

More information about this workshop, including an opportunity to provide an expression of interest in attending and potentially speaking, can be found HERE.

Related Posts:
Golden Spike taps Northrup Grumman to design manned lunar lander
(Ben Evans, AmericaSpace, January 13, 2013)
Turning science fiction to science fact (Jeff Foust, The Space Review, December 11, 2012)

Saturday, March 9, 2013

New 3D CLSE lunar flyover video: Schrödinger basin


David A. Kring, Ph.D.
Center for Lunar Science & Exploration (CLSE)


The Center for Lunar Science and Exploration added another video to its Atlas of Lunar Flyovers. In this new addition, we explore the floor of the Schrodinger basin.The direct link to the new flyover is HERE.

The Moon’s Schrödinger basin is the best preserved impact basin of its size.  Its broad flat floor offers several safe landing sites and the geology within the basin is extraordinary.  The two highest science priorities and over half of the science objectives outlined in the National Research Council (NRC) report The Scientific Context for Exploration of the Moon (2007) can be addressed with field studies and samples collected in Schrödinger basin.

Schrödinger basin CLSE landing study 'Site B' (yellow ellipse), well within the 10 km safety 'walk-back' distance of the an unnamed 6.8 km Copernican Age crater that presumably excavated deep into the basin's intact peak rings, depositing valuable samples near the crater rim. (Further details on this site will be the subject of a future post.) The site, in context with the larger basin, is marked with a yellow arrow below. LROC Wide Angle Camera (WAC) monochrome (643nm) observation M169698283C, LRO orbit 10142, September 3, 2011; angle of incidence 72.67° at 81.3 meters resolution, from 58.66 km [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
The video highlights three features in the basin.  It begins with a flight along a fracture in the basin floor towards an immense volcanic vent of pyroclastic material.  Because of the in situ resource utilization (ISRU) potential of the pyroclastic material, this vent was a target of the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate (ESMD) portion of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) mission.

The notably darker material surrounding Schrödinger basin's distinctive pyroclastic vent. Another landing site (green arrow, in an image showing the entire basin interior floor) is proposed near upper center right in this oblique LROC Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) field of view. LROC NAC mosaic M121415248LR, LRO orbit 3026, February 21, 2010; angle of incidence 81.66° (spacecraft slew -65.65° off nadir) rough resolution 3.7 meters from 53 km [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
The flyover then turns towards the towering and mountainous peak ring that contains rock exposures of material uplifted from the mid- to lower-crust by the basin-forming impact event.  The flyover then sweeps back towards the pyroclastic vent over an intervening plain of melt-bearing impact lithologies.  Samples of that material can be used to determine the age of the Schrödinger basin and, thus, help test the lunar cataclysm hypothesis.

Related Posts:
Amundsen crater: CLSE lunar landing site study (February 5, 2013)
Scarps in Schrödinger (September 28, 2011)
Sampling Schrödinger (August 17, 2011)
A review of all things Schrödinger (August 31, 2010)
LOLA: Schrödinger basin (July 17, 2010)
Craters on the Schrödinger pyroclastic cone (April 24, 2010)

LROC WAC 100 meter monochrome global mosaic shows the 312 km-wide Schrödinger basin, a prominent feature of the far southern far side latitudes and stand out increasingly as a location where many high-priority lunar exploration science goals might be accomplished. The area includes smooth and rough plains, basin wall material, hummocky terrain, intact peak rings, mare, dark explosive volcanic material and ridged terrain. CLSE Landing Site Study Site A (green arrow) and Site B (yellow arrow) are shown at much higher resolution in the images further above [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Deadline approaching for Lunar Exploration Summer Intern Program

Were these boulders on the west slope, and the rocky outcrop above on Hausen crater's central peak, excavated from the Moon's mantle - rebounding from below the Moon's megaregolith and crust? The CLSE Landing Site Study - the work of students in the CLSE Lunar Exploration Summer Intern Program - estimate the Hausen impact as perhaps the Moon's deepest natural excavation. LROC NAC M105100555LR, orbit 643, August 16, 2009; resolution 49 cm from 41.38 km [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].

The deadline is approaching for applications to the 2013 edition of the Lunar Exploration Summer Intern Program.

Over the previous five summers, graduate student teams conducted a global survey of lunar landing sites that are suitable for meeting the objectives in the NRC (2007) report "The Scientific Context for Exploration of the Moon."  
A summary of those results was recently published (http://www.lpi.usra.edu/nlsi/CLSE-landing-site-study/).

During the summer of 2013, students will generate a detailed assessment of one or two high-priority landing sites identified in that report. This summer study will utilize the latest lunar data (e.g., M3, LOLA, LROC), explore potential traverse routes and stations, and identify hurdles that mission architects will need to address.

Additional details about the program and application process can be found HERE.

The application deadline is March 1, 2013. Email: kring@lpi.usra.edu

USRA - Lunar and Planetary Institute
3600 Bay Area Blvd.
Houston, TX  77058-1113
(281) 486-2119
 

Research publications: http://www.lpi.usra.edu/science/kring/research.shtml

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Amundsen crater and the CLSE Landing Site Study

Embracing the Void - A contributing team to A GLOBAL LUNAR LANDING SITE STUDY to PROVIDE the SCIENTIFIC CONTEXT for EXPLORATION of the MOON (CLSE/LPI/NLSI, 2012) suggests a landing site on the floor of Amundsen crater, in the Moon's far south, on a well-lit area nestled on the edge of a permanently shadowed region (PSR) - an "integrated site," carefully selected to efficiently address each of the priorities outlined by the National Research Council under "Science Concept 4" in 2007.   LROC Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) mosaic, LROC QuickMap, 16 meters resolution [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
First in a series of posts highlighting newly-suggested landing sites selected to address high-priority science goals - from a remarkable lunar landing site study published by the Center for Lunar Science and Exploration:
An area chosen to groundtruth, to baseline the life cycle and retention of volatiles on the Moon is also close to a prominent central peak which may present accessible samples of the Moon's megaregolith, crust or mantle. To the north, the north wall and floor of Amundsen remains in perpetual shadow. Maximum 80 meter resolution section from LROC Wide Angle Camera (WAC) monochrome (643nm) observation M139410549ME, LRO orbit 5678, September 18, 2010 [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].

Joel Raupe
Lunar Pioneer

In November the Center for Lunar Science and Exploration, a distinguished science team sponsored by the NASA Lunar Science Institute (NLSI), released a set of comprehensive lunar landing site studies fashioned carefully on the lunar Science Concepts and Goals outlined in the National Research Council's influential 2007 report The Scientific Context for the Exploration of the Moon.

The last section of the eight-part study addresses the possibility of exploration and sample return from South Pole-Aitken basin and how sites selected there might fulfill all Science Goals outlined in the 2007 NRC report. Meanwhile, within the CLSE Landing Site Study, the section addressing NRC Science Concept 4 is directed at the important goal of gaining ground truth regarding the life cycle of volatiles on the surface of the Moon, and especially their retention in permanently shadowed cold traps near the north and south poles. Though a study for a potential New Frontiers-class mission to study lunar volatiles was included in the 2013-2022 Decadal Survey, it was not specifically included in recommendations for a South Pole-Aitken basin sampling mission and a new lunar geophysical network during the decade ahead.

The CLSE Landing Site Study recommendations, however, were constrained by many of the limits placed on a manned mission, both within and beyond the Constellation program, cancelled as the studies developed.

To groundtruth, so to speak, the real-time transport, loss and retention of lunar volatiles (e.g., water and hydroxyl molecules, neutral hydrogen or the exotic species tossed up by the LCROSS impact) the team working on NRC Science Concept 4 carried out a careful study of the north and south polar regions and, as announced originally at the 43rd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, Amundsen crater emerged as one of the far south's most favorable locations. (The lunar north also had targets emerging from the data, more perhaps than in the south, we hope to also spotlight in near future.)

A refrain repeated often in the CLSE Landing Site Study was emergence of a many favorable targets, some familiar and some not. However, with budgetary stresses unlikely to disappear soon, identifying those areas presenting the greatest probability of addressing multiple science concepts, visiting as few landing sites as necessary, has become valued work. Beyond emerging as a bright target in remote sensing of volatiles, Amundsen presents the added virtue of being within South Pole-Aitken. Examples of targets addressing overlapping priority science goals also included Schrödinger basin and Antoniadi crater.

(The work continues. Just this past week the Center announced the availability of a web-based ArcGIS tool for evaluating SPA landing sites.)

Figure 4.25 from - "Science Concept 4: The Lunar Poles are Special Environments that may bare witness to the Volatile Flux over the latter part of Solar System history" (2012). The floor of Amundsen crater, Permanently Shadowed Regions (PSRs - dark blue) and sites where all five of "Science Concept 4" Science Goals, relating to lunar volatiles, might be met (light blue), together with proposed landing sites (stars) and science stations (circles). Radii of the 10 km "walk-back" distance, and 20 km, respectively, from each landing site are shown as solid and dashed lines. [LROC WAC/LOLA shaded relief - NASA/GSFC/ASU].
Students in the Lunar & Planetary Institute Summer Intern Program methodically attacked the puzzle of picking landing sites likely to provide important answers to the planetary science questions outlined in the NRC’s Space Studies Board 2007 report. Greatly simplified, locations satisfying NRC Science Concept 4 specifics were figuratively overlaid one upon another to further identify locations suited to multiple science goals.

Seeing in the Dark - (LROC QuickMap - South Pole orthographic projection) - the interior of Amundsen crater. LRO laser altimetry has now disclosed great detail within the Moon's Permanently Shadowed Regions (PSRs), and CLSE Science Concept 4 suggested landing sites concepts A and B straddle a boundary between well-lit zones of moderate temperatures and priority lunar volatile science stations in perpetual shadow, characterized by some of the Solar System's coldest temperatures. "Site A" is shown by the red cross, "B" by the yellow [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
Located inside the 4.1 billion year old South Pole-Aitken impact basin, 105 km Amundsen is the youngest complex crater in the far lunar south, one of only three complex craters poleward of 80°S. Though formed in the late Nectarian its floor is consistant with the Imbrium peiord. LROC WAC monochrome (643nm) observation M139410549ME, LRO orbit 5678, September 18, 2010; resolution 80 meters per pixel from 57.37 km [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].

Straddling the 270th meridian east, at the boundary of the Moon's near and far sides, the area of interest at Amundsen is nominally within "line of sight" (under favorable libration) from Earth. Here the crater, its floor and eastern wall, are visible in reflected radar. From S-band (12.6 cm wavelength) radar view of the Moon's south pole obtained using Arecibo and Green Bank, available HERE. Yellow star marks "Site A." Data was acquired in 2005 and published in 2006, and "have a single-look spatial resolution of 20 meters per pixel" [NLSI/Cornell].
Over five summers successive groups of students worked on each of the 2007 Science Goals outlined by the NRC, as the economic, political and lunar science environment evolved around them.

The Constellation program was scrubbed, including the Altair lander, though the on-time and under-budget unmanned supporting missions already well-along in development survived. LCROSS and LRO, fortunately, thrived together, along with development of the ambitiously efficient precursors GRAIL and LADEE. As the momentum originally put into motion by Constellation and the aftermath of the Columbia accident finally experiences a kind of inevitable "heat death," however, the specifics of the future of U.S. unmanned exploration of the Moon is gravely in doubt. Notwithstanding a supposed plan to return astronauts to the lunar vicinity later in the decade, it's difficult to imagine how such a mission can improve upon the science returned by LRO.

That first summer the LPI interns began with data rooted still in the 20th century. Five summers later, fresh teams, focused on subsequent NRC Science Goals, were assisted with results from missions entirely rooted in the 21st century. They were fortunate enough to sample the first sips from a fire hose of data eventually returned from Japan’s Kaguya, India’s Chandrayaan-1, China’s Chang’E-1 and 2; along with results from LCROSS and, perhaps most important, the record-breaking data still coming down from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.

Constraints on a the starting prospect of manned missions to the Moon, those "sorties" seen as originating from "an extended human presence" at a permanent station on the rim of Shackleton crater, were lifted before the CLSE Landing Site studies were published. By the time of the study's release pinning NASA or Congress down on the ways and means of accomplishing lunar science seemed similar to keeping spaghetti on a fork. Nevertheless, if the only permanent legacy of the defunct Constellation program turns out to be studies like the one produced by CLSE, assisted by a swarm of well-managed and efficient unmanned spacecraft like LRO, it may very well prove to be worth every penny "wasted" on the Ares boosters and the Altair lander. (There are, of course, other windfalls worth mentioning beyond the scope of this Introduction.)

Science Concept 4 from "SCIENTIFIC CONTEXT for the EXPLORATION of the MOON (2007)." The Center for Lunar Science and Exploration methodically took on the task of using the latest data to begin suggesting landing sites to fulfill the National Research Council lunar science priorities, resulting in a remarkable report released in November 2012.
Their finished product speaks well for itself, and the editing and teaching skills of the Student Intern Program coordinators and study co-editors David A. Kring and Daniel D. Durda of the Lunar and Planetary Institute. A host lunar targets, many still unnamed, have augmented the 50 Constellation Regions of Interest.

“As this study unfolded, it became clear the Apollo landing sites, while completely reshaping our understanding of the solar system 50 years ago, represent only a tiny fraction of the lunar surface," Kring wrote last November.

"Other sites can reveal completely new details of lunar history and are, arguably, better sites for addressing the fundamentally important issues identified in the NRC's 2007 report.  This study asked a simple question, where on the lunar surface could the objectives in the 2007 report be addressed?

"Maps keyed to each of those objectives were created and, when those maps were stacked, several lunar surface locations popped out as the scientifically-richest landing sites."

Amundsen (r) in context with the far lunar south. LROC Quickmap, south pole orthographic projection at 500 meters per pixel resolution [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].
"Volatiles at the Lunar South Pole: A Case Study for a Mission to Amundsen Crater" (LPSC 2012, #1619), acknowledged the yeoman labor on addressing "Science Goal 4," fleshed out in depth in the CLSE Landing Site Study:

From  "Science Concept 4: The Lunar Poles are Special Environments that may bare witness to the Volatile Flux over the latter part of Solar System history."
"Amundsen crater, centered at 84.6°S, 85.6°E, is a complex, central-peak crater approximately 100 kilometers in diameter...the youngest south polar complex crater. Amundsen formed in the late Nectarian, but its floor has a crater density consistent with an Imbrium age. The entire crater sits within the South Pole-Aitken (SPA) impact basin, the oldest and largest discernible lunar impact crater.

"Approximately 9 percent of the interior of Amundsen is in permanent shadow and  approximately 6 percent of the interior satisfies all five of the NRC (2007) Concept 4 Science Goals. A 43 square kilometer region directly north of our proposed landing site is one such region in which all five Science Goals could be addressed.


We chose Amundsen crater because it has many easily-accessible sites that address all or most Science Goals (IV).
Figure 4.8 from "Science Concept 4: The Lunar Poles are Special Environments that may bare witness to the Volatile Flux over the latter part of Solar System history." shows areas in the vicinity of the lunar South Pole where all the priority questions related to NRC 2007 Science Goal 4 might be fulfilled. Addressing all these priorities obviously narrows the selection of landing sites down rapidly and makes Amundsen crater stand out.
A broad range of geologic features is also present within Amundsen; these include crater floor materials, crater walls, wall slumps from higher on the crater wall or rim and central peak material. It also contains many smaller craters with varying degrees of degradation. Sampling these various morphologies may place constraints on distribution of volatiles, partially addressing Science Goal 4a.

We identified two landing sites (A and B) on the floor of Amundsen crater lit up to one quarter of a lunation (Zuber et al., 2011). 

Those sites provide access to stations within (Permanently Shadowed Regions) while providing a base of operations in an illuminated region. Stations outside of PSRs can serve as experimental controls for the processes that affect volatile distribution within PSRs. Contrasts between the two regions can also be used to evaluate transport mechanisms. Remotely observed circular polarization ratios (CPR) (Zhang and Paige, 2010) also vary around both landing sites, providing an opportunity to ground-truth the global data set and test the effects of ground ice and surface roughness on those CPR values. Temperatures derived from the Diviner radiometer (Paige et al., 2010) also helped define station locations.
Temperature extremes at the Moon's south pole as detected by the The DIVINER Lunar Radiometer Experiment on-board the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) shows the rapid temperature swing, within walk-back distance from a lunar lander, at the study's suggested landing sites at Amundsen (black arrow) [NASA/GSFC/UCLA].