Categories: Science

NASA’s New Moon Mosaic Lets You Peer Deep Into Shackleton Crater

We’re seeing the moon in a new light. A fresh NASA mosaic view of the lunar south pole region highlights a scenic crater and gives us a look at a prime area for future human exploration. 

The mosaic combines imagery sent back from two different spacecraft in orbit around the moon. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera is aboard a NASA orbiter. ShadowCam, a NASA instrument, is in residence on the Korea Aerospace Research Institute’s Danuri orbiter. Danuri is more officially known as the Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter. 

Enlarge Image

Explore the full NASA mosaic showing the depths of Shackleton Crater on the moon. Click to enlarge.

NASA/KARI/ASU

LROC sends back gorgeous views of the moon’s surface while ShadowCam specializes in hard-to-see shadowed regions.

“ShadowCam is 200-times more light-sensitive than LROC and can operate successfully in these extremely low-light conditions, revealing features and terrain details that are not visible to LROC,” NASA said in a statement on Tuesday.

Shackleton Crater, named for Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackleton, is permanently shadowed inside. Most images of this area of the moon show a dark void, but ShadowCam can see into the crater’s interior. However, ShadowCam’s superpower means it can’t capture clean images of the more brightly lit surface. That’s where LROC comes in. NASA said the combined view shows the region in “unprecedented detail.”

The Artemis program is underway. It’s aiming for what will be one of the biggest moments in human space exploration: the first landing of astronauts on the lunar surface since the Apollo era of the ’60s and ’70s. NASA is targeting the south polar region and has identified 13 candidate landing sites, several of which are located near Shackleton.

Watch this: NASA Reveals Artemis 3 Moon Mission Spacesuit 05:16

The southern end of the moon is exciting because it may harbor deposits of water ice. Water is difficult to transport across space in large quantities. Harvesting water on site on the moon would enable a steady human presence there and provide resources for making rocket fuel to power expeditions deeper into the solar system.

NASA already flew an uncrewed Artemis I test mission around the moon. Artemis II will send astronauts on a journey around our lunar neighbor. Artemis III, currently planned for 2025, will aim to put boots on the moon. Those future Artemis explorers might look at this image and see where they’ll leave footprints one day.

Share

Recent Posts

US scrambles as drones shape the landscape of war: ‘the future is here’

close Video U.S. Army buys 12,000 drones from Red Cat's Teal Drones U.S. Army beefs…

4 minutes ago

Fox News AI Newsletter: Mr. Miyagi’s dramatic return

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER: - ‘Cobra Kai’ used AI to bring back ‘Karate Kid’ character in…

24 minutes ago

Who is Pam Bondi, Trump’s new pick for attorney general?

Just hours after former Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz withdrew his name from consideration to be…

34 minutes ago

How to easily record phone calls on your Android

Have you ever wished you could save that important conversation or hilarious chat with your…

3 hours ago

Trump’s sway over Republicans stronger than ever, but Sununu says GOP still a ‘big-tent party’

MARCO ISLAND, Fla. — With his convincing White House victory this month, President-elect Donald Trump's…

3 hours ago

Blue state to shutter over a dozen migrant shelters as Trump’s set to implement deportation agenda

close Video Left wing demonstrators disrupt NYC Council hearing, demand city stops migrant shelter evictions…

5 hours ago