News on the Moon
- Solar wind, moon dust and Martian lights
- The moons gravity changes along its surface
- NASA invites you to help map the Moon
- Lunar water different than our water
- What caused the meteor-shower that created tjhe lunar craters?
- 2 new videaos on the Moon and its creation
- Lunar Impact History sheds ligth on Earths past
- Recent geological activity on the Moon
- Odd vulcanoes inside the Moon
- Granular flow in Lunar crater
- Rolling stone on the Moon
- Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter reveals new lunar surface features
- Spectacular views of Lunar Aristarchus crater
- Each Solar outburst strips the Moon of 100-200tons
- New topographic map of the Moon
- The Moons strange ionosphere
- Ancient lunar dynamo may explain magnetized Moon-rocks
- Subte shades of grey reveals Titanium on ythe Moon
- New hypotesis on crater debris
- Mapping of Lunar crust thickness
- The Moons north pole
- The mystery of the missing moon
- Earths moon could be younger than previously thought
- 'Big Splat' may explain Moon's mountainous farside
- Fantastic images of the Tycho crater from LRO
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The Moon at your fingertips
Tuesday, 17 May 2011 10:12
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| Solar system - The moon |
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NASA has created a new interactive web-based tool that incorporates observations from past and current lunar missions creating one of the most comprehensive lunar research websites to date.
The Lunar Mapping and Modeling Project at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. has created an online set of capabilities and tools that will allow anyone with an Internet connection to search through, view, and analyze a vast number of lunar images and other digital products. The data and tools available through the project website will allow researchers to perform in-depth analyses to support mission planning and system design for lunar exploration and science missions. It will permit detailed scientific analysis and discovery and open additional educational and outreach opportunities.
At the LMMP websie, you have a zoom- and clickable map with information and downloads everywhere! "By making these data widely available to the general public, NASA seeks to provide engineers, scientists, mission planners, educators and students with a new resource that will allow them to view and analyze a wide array of lunar images and other data products in a way not previously available to such a diverse group," said Raymond French, integration lead for the Lunar Mapping and Modeling Project Office at Marshall. |






