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Shooting for the Moon-This Time to Stay

An artist's rendition of NASA's Orion spacecraft as well as its proposed Deep Space Gateway, a crew-tended spaceport in lunar orbit that could support surface operations on the moon. Credit: NASA

From Scientific American: MOFFETT FIELD, Calif.—Earth’s nearest neighbor, the moon, is far from being a “been there, done that” world in space science and exploration. That’s the message from scientists and engineers at NASA’s Lunar Science for Landed Missions Workshop, recently held here at the space agency’s Ames Research Center.

Between 1969 and 1972 a dozen U.S. astronauts voyaged there to scout stretches of the desolate, crater-pocked landscape as part of NASA’s Apollo program. But almost half a century after those fleeting forays, humans have yet to go back. Now a rising tide of spacefaring nations are poised to visit (or revisit) the moon, among them European countries, China, Russia, Japan, India and, of course, the U.S.

Calling them back is the fact that, of all destinations in the solar system, the moon is not only the most accessible but also one of the most scientifically interesting. Thought to have formed shortly after Earth itself from debris ejected by our young 鶹ӰԺ collision with a Mars-size protoplanet, the moon has been witness to nearly 4.5 billion years of our world’s, along with the solar system’s, history. Impact craters and trace elements captured on its airless surface record processes that also shaped Earth’s early years, but were wiped out by our own 鶹ӰԺ geologic processes. Precisely because it is so close, so inert and so dead, the moon may be the best place in the solar system to go to answer the question of how and why Earth became so active and alive.