News on Lunar-missions
- New even more detailed images of Apollo landers
- GRAIL Moon-satellites returns video of the Moon
- NASAs twin Moon probes enters orbit this weekend
- GRAIL satellittes heading for the Moon
- See the Apollo landings on Google-Moon
- GRAIL heading for the Moon
- Lunar landing sites imaged from a 21km orbit!
- NASA Moon mission ready for launch
- Launch of GRAIL Lunar mission sep 9
- Twin ARTEMIS probes to study moon in 3D
- Artemis probe inserted into lunar orbits
- China increasing rocket capabilities
- Stunning new LRO images of Apollo 14 lanidng site
- Re-inventing the wheel for micro-rovers
- China publishes in-flght videoes of lunar orbiter
- Spacemining on the moon is a not-so-distant possibility
- China presents first photos from new lunar orbiter
- Chinese lunar orbioter reaches Moon-orbit
- Chinas second lunar probe launched
- Water on the Moon can affect telescope plans
- ESAs moon-lander
- NASA tests Orion module
- Lost reflector found on the Moon
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Spacemining on the moon is a not-so-distant possibility
Wednesday, 17 November 2010 10:40
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| Spaceflight - Lunar-missions |
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While lunar mining might some day be economically feasible for countries and companies, a Missouri University researcher believes strongly that mining in space is essential to the very survival of our species "Humanity eventually needs to live in more than just one place, other than the Earth," says Dr. Leslie Gertsch, an associate professor of geological engineering at Missouri S&T. According to Gertsch, moon dirt contains a surprising amount of vital compounds, including water and maybe even "rare-earth elements" like lithium (think lithium-ion batteries). Gertsch became fascinated with the moon while watching Apollo astronauts collecting lunar rocks on a black and white television in her family's Ohio farm house. Last year, she was paying close attention when NASA blasted a hole in the moon's surface, where more water than expected was discovered. In addition to water, the moon has hydrogen, aluminum and iron.
Best practices for mining on the moon and beyond are still being developed, of course, and that's a big part of Gertsch's research. She knows space mining would be essential to colonizing the solar system. Explorers would need to create fuel and breathing gasses as they traveled, instead of hauling heavy supplies with them from Earth. "We could launch from the moon to go to Mars, for instance, at a lower cost," says Gertsch, who notes that asteroids and comets are also good candidates for space mining activities. Source: NCSU |





Gertsch says the leading theory these days is that the moon was actually part of the Earth at one time - that it formed in the aftermath of a collision between the Earth and a massive foreign object. So it stands to reason that the moon has some natural resources in common with the Earth.