Bombing the Moon: Spectacularly Unspectacular
NASA slams two probes into the moon, striking the lunar surface at more than 5,000 miles per hour. The space agency calls the probe a success but is still puzzled over what happened to the expected 6-mile-high debris plume.
The sizzle turned to fizzle for NASA Oct. 9 as it slammed two probes traveling more than 5,000 miles per hour into the moon's surface in a search for lunar water. While jubilant NASA scientists called the precision strike a success, they are initially puzzled about what happened to an expected 6-mile-high plume of dirt and dust expected to be created by the impact.The lack of a plume disappointed a worldwide audience watching on NASA TV and the Internet. NASA's live feed tracked the rapidly descending LCROSS to just before impact and nothing more. The live feed turned to static. Reports from virtually every available Earth-based and space-based telescope failed to show either an impact flash or a plume.
"At first glimpse there was an impact, we saw the crater and we got the measurements we needed," LCROSS principal investigator Tony Colaprete said at a NASA press conference 2 hours after the crash. "The impact flash confirmed the actual size of the crater, which was pretty close to what we expected."
Colaprete stressed all the data and all the images were strictly preliminary. He said the plume could be affected by the angle of the impact, the type of material hit, the composition of the lunar surface and how deep LCROSS buried itself on impact. He added that NASA scientists were less interested in images than data collected from spectrographs mounted aboard the LCROSS. "I saw variations in the spectra," Colaprete said. "I'm thrilled-that's a very good sign. The spectra is where the science is."








