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Twin NASA 'Grail' Probes Launched To Study Insides Of Moon

By MARCIA DUNN   09/10/11 02:00 PM ET   AP

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- A pair of spacecraft rocketed toward the moon Saturday on the first mission dedicated to measuring lunar gravity and determining what's inside Earth's orbiting companion – all the way down to the core.

"I could hardly be happier," said the lead scientist, Maria Zuber. After two days of delays and almost another, "I was trying to be as calm as I could be."

NASA launched the near identical probes – named Grail-A and Grail-B – aboard a relatively small Delta II rocket to save money. It will take close to four months for the spacecraft to reach the moon, a long, roundabout journey compared with the zippy three-day trip of the Apollo astronauts four decades ago.

Grail-A popped off the upper stage of the rocket exactly as planned 1 1/2 hours after liftoff, followed eight minutes later by Grail-B. Both releases were seen live on NASA TV thanks to an on-board rocket camera, and generated loud applause in Launch Control.

The spacecraft are traveling independently to the moon, with A arriving on New Year's Eve and B on New Year's Day.

Once they were safely on their way, Zuber announced a contest for schoolchildren to replace the "working-class names" of Grail-A and Grail-B.

"Grail, simply put, is a journey to the center of the moon," said Ed Weiler, head of NASA's science mission directorate, borrowing from the title of the Jules Verne science fiction classic, "Journey to the Center of the Earth."

The world has launched more than 100 missions to the moon since the Soviet Union's Luna probes in 1959. That includes NASA's six Apollo moon landings that put 12 men on the lunar surface.

NASA's Grail twins – each the size of a washing machine – won't land on the moon but will conduct their science survey from a polar lunar orbit.

Beginning in March, once the spacecraft are orbiting just 34 miles above the moon's surface, scientists will monitor the slight variations in distance between the two to map the moon's entire gravitational field. The measurements will continue through May.

"It will probe the interior of the moon and map its gravity field 100 to 1,000 times better than ever before. We will learn more about the interior of the moon with Grail than all previous lunar missions combined," Weiler said.

At the same time, four cameras on each spacecraft will offer schoolchildren the opportunity to order up whatever pictures of the moon they want. The educational effort, called MoonKAM, is spearheaded by Sally Ride, America's first spacewoman. As of Saturday, more than 1,100 schools had signed up.

The entire Grail mission costs $496 million.

Zuber, the mission's principal investigator and a planetary scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said the precise lunar gravity measurements will help her and other planetary scientists better understand how the moon evolved over the past 4 billion years. The findings also should help identify the composition of the moon's core: whether it's made of solid iron or possibly titanium oxide.

Another puzzle that Grail may help solve, Zuber said, is whether Earth indeed had a smaller second moon. Last month, astronomers suggested the two moons collided and the little one glommed onto the big one, a possible explanation for how the lunar highlands came to be.

Knowing where the moon's gravity is stronger will enable the United States and other countries to better pinpoint landing locations for future explorers, whether robot or human. The gravity on the moon is uneven and about one-sixth Earth's pull.

"If you want to land right next to a particular outcrop (of rock), you're going to be able to do it," Zuber said. "There will be no reason to do another gravity experiment of the moon in any of our lifetimes."

Zuber said the Grail findings should eliminate cliffhangers like the Apollo 11 landing in 1969 by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. They overshot their touchdown site in part because of the subtle gravity changes in the moon's surface below; they almost ran out of fuel before safely touching down on the Sea of Tranquility.

"It will be easier next time," Zuber promised.

For now, NASA has no plans to return astronauts to the moon, Earth's closest neighbor at approximately 240,000 miles away. That program, called Constellation, was canceled last year by President Barack Obama, who favors asteroids and Mars as potential destinations in America's future without the shuttle.

This is the second planetary mission for NASA since the space shuttle program ended in July, and attracted a large crowd to Cape Canaveral. NASA counted nearly 1,000 guests at Kennedy Space Center on Saturday, nowhere near the 12,000 on hand for the Juno launch to Jupiter at the beginning of August.

Grail was supposed to soar Thursday, but high wind interfered. Then NASA needed an extra day to check the rocket after engine heaters stayed on too long. High wind almost stopped NASA again Saturday; the launch team had to skip the morning's first opportunity, but the wind dissipated just in time for the second.

The year's grand finale will be the launch of the biggest Mars rover ever the day after Thanksgiving.

"NASA is still doing business even though the shuttles stopped flying," Weiler told reporters earlier in the week.

Grail is the 110th mission to target the moon, according to NASA records. Missions have been launched by the United States, Soviet Union, Japan, China and India.

The previous moonshot was two years ago: NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. Just last month, the moon-circling probe beamed back the sharpest pictures yet of some of the Apollo artifacts left on the moon from 1969 through 1972 – and even moonwalkers' tracks. NASA released the photos earlier in the week.

Ride and Zuber will help pick the winning names for the Grail twins later this year, well before the spacecraft reach the moon.

Zuber said she has her own pet names, "but I think I'll keep those to myself because I don't want to influence the contestants." Some of the names used by members of her team over the four-year life of the project: Fred and Ginger, Castor and Pollux, and Tom and Jerry.

___

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- A pair of spacecraft rocketed toward the moon Saturday on the first mission dedicated to measuring lunar gravity and determining what's inside Earth's orbiting companion &ndash...
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- A pair of spacecraft rocketed toward the moon Saturday on the first mission dedicated to measuring lunar gravity and determining what's inside Earth's orbiting companion &ndash...
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bridge to somewhere
That's impossible, even for a computer!
11:53 AM on 09/23/2011
The perfect names: Alice and Ralph!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bccmeteorites
Don't believe everything NASA says.
11:08 PM on 09/14/2011
Calling to defund NASA as a waste of time or a good for nothing agency is a bad idea. This country cannot take another 20 or 30 thousand unemployed college educated people. It just can't, it would be a real disaster with lots of misery. Sure NASA like any other agency is wrought with politics and the missions are repetitive, how many times are we going to study the lunar gravity......been there done that? The people are like you and me, an astronaut in a diaper speeding across the country to kill her co-worker over a really dull looking guy. A former DoD-NASA scientist (Stewart Nozette) arrested for espionage selling government secrets and setting up fake companies to swindle NASA taxpayer funds. And other unmentionables. IMO we can cut back on our failed military adventures and reinvest that in the only government agency that can has the CAPABILITY to provide a future with remarkable returns.
05:25 PM on 09/12/2011
Those two space probes are going to find sentinal prime.
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FranklinCat
18 claws & 3½ fangs
06:57 PM on 09/11/2011
What's wrong with "working-class names"? I suggest Joe Hill and Mother Jones.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
librldem
Snarking for Merika n jebus! Glory!
02:51 PM on 09/11/2011
I think they should be named Stanley Laurel and Oliver Hardy. The C Street cult believes that there is a huge pyramid in the moon where jebus is living and waiting for 12/21/12 or whenever the next end time rolls around. They may also be looking for other bases on the dark side of the moon like they found before right? lol
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lexsird
a Liberal Conservative
06:36 AM on 09/11/2011
We aren't really a nation anymore; just a bunch of consumers, wage slaves for corporations, and a war machine. We've been sold out, bought out, thrown out, and dropped out. If you hear laughter, its the world; they are amazed we are so stupid, to let it happen.
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06:04 PM on 09/11/2011
So, how about those Jets vs Cowboys ?
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lexsird
a Liberal Conservative
07:08 PM on 09/11/2011
I don't know, I haven't followed any sport for decades. I know that is Football; Cowboys are in Dallas, and Jets are in NY. That is my latest up to date info on that question. I think sports are something great for people to participate in, but to watch is voyeuristic narcissism. That's my polite version. Yes, I am a dude; I just have better things to do with my time.
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MCTSilverlakeCA
retired Sr Litigation Insurance Fraud Manager
04:33 AM on 09/11/2011
$760 billion stimulus funds given to banks who spent it all on golden handshakes and bonuses-after losing twice that much of their depositors money in high stakes gambling--, every state budget so strapped for cash that they are laying off even essential services personnel, Federal politicians bickering over who gets whose favorite program cut first and by how much, 40 million Homeless Americans who last Election HAD a vote who can't now that they don't have a home street address (required on ballots) to vote FROM, tens of thousands of teachers laid off, postal offices and banks closing...and NASA thinks we should investigate the INSIDE of the Moon! When someone asks you how the Federal Government can end up spending $1400 for a hammer and $300 for a box of tissues- and then complain it has "No Money" to pay its bills- THIS IS WHY! ..
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lexsird
a Liberal Conservative
06:47 AM on 09/11/2011
What do you think any other peoples in the world would do if their government sold them out this bad? I ponder what our founding fathers would say.
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Lahonda
Bynocent Instander
12:22 AM on 09/11/2011
Holy Grail?
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MCTSilverlakeCA
retired Sr Litigation Insurance Fraud Manager
04:35 AM on 09/11/2011
more like Monty Python!
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Harris Ace Jackson
existentialist agnostic
10:36 PM on 09/10/2011
America knows the value of the moon, or they wouldn't have spent the money. Helium 3 ?
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MCTSilverlakeCA
retired Sr Litigation Insurance Fraud Manager
04:36 AM on 09/11/2011
I knew it! Congress is finally running out of Hot Air and has to take drastic measures to find new sources to import it from!
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Harris Ace Jackson
existentialist agnostic
06:58 AM on 09/11/2011
lol, here's a link to what the stuff can actually do. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a2xChmfLlMo&feature=share Enjoy
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Waterlooboy
Alba gu Bràth
10:36 PM on 09/10/2011
I'm all for space exploration. It's one thing a federal government should invest in. Even if we don't see a return for decades. We must progress. Sometimes I don't think we are making as much progress as we think. 70 years ago we had cars, planes, the telephone, movies, radio, the beginnings of TV. 70 years before that there was no electric lights, no telephone, no radio, air travel was fiction, people got around by horseback or train.
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Rodney Tucker
Rodney
10:23 PM on 09/10/2011
This is great, still trying to get to the stars. There are a lot of short sighted people that can't see past their nose. The money spent kept people in the US employed. But from the sounds of it, they rather see those people on unemployment and the money for the launches used to pay for those unemployment benifits. Money has to be spent, rather it be spent on science and space than oil wells off the coast of South America or some where else outside the US for non direct benifit for the citizens of the US. And if the human populations keeps growing, we are going to need to live some place else besides this planet. There is only so much room here. And no one wants to talk about the other alternative.
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Rich Cash
Enlisted in 1971 - Retired in 1996
10:32 PM on 09/10/2011
Absolutely!
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lexsird
a Liberal Conservative
06:48 AM on 09/11/2011
I have a feeling the herd is going to be thinned. The writing is on the wall.
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Rich Cash
Enlisted in 1971 - Retired in 1996
10:18 PM on 09/10/2011
For all the people whining about NASA and the money "wasted" on space exloration, I wish I could have taken all of you to just one launch of the Space Shuttle. There is nothing more awe inspiring than watching Americans being launched into space, and there is NOTHING that the United States has ever done that has more potential impact on the future of our species then our investment in space exploration. Every scrap of knowledge that we gain through these efforts, no matter how insignificant they may seem today, will contribute to our fundamental knowledge of the universe. Who knows which of these bits of knowledge may prove to be the saving factor for our planet and our existence?
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MCTSilverlakeCA
retired Sr Litigation Insurance Fraud Manager
04:40 AM on 09/11/2011
I dunno...I always thought that the look in a homeless American child's eye..or her fathers..who I just gave a hot meal to was worth any other photo... the Moon has just one word to describe it - Barren, the look in the child's eyes I couldn't describe in ten thousand words....
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lexsird
a Liberal Conservative
06:49 AM on 09/11/2011
If we can't get our greed and warmongering under control, we really don't deserve to get to the stars.
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Rich Cash
Enlisted in 1971 - Retired in 1996
07:26 AM on 09/11/2011
C'mon lex..."greed" is what will ultimately get us off this planet for good. There's more iron and nickel in one medium sized asteroid than has been mined on earth in the last 100 years. And let's not even talk about all the Helium-3 on the moon...(look it up). And I don't know about you, but I'd really like to have my children have more than one chance for survival despite warmongering and greed. If you'd care to give up your own children's chances for survival to serve your own moralistic beliefs, I'd really like to hear why.
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fireofenergy
Promote freedom AND science
09:57 PM on 09/10/2011
I think the single most important "object" developed for NASA is the GaAs solar cell. It is twice as efficient as normal panels. If machine made (along with machine made batteries), concentrating collectors would enable 500,000 square miles of solar installation jobs.
Imagine that, most all problems solved!
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Rodney Tucker
Rodney
10:26 PM on 09/10/2011
Where would you put this 500 thousand square mile solar panel? And the batteries needed for power 24 hours a day? And the installation jobs would only last for a few months if every unemployed person was employed.
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fireofenergy
Promote freedom AND science
11:30 PM on 09/10/2011
Not just one panel, batteries go just about anywhere and the "job" would take decades if it grew exponentially. Economically, it would be better than not!

As for enviro damage, more is explained in another post...
http://www.theenvironmentsite.org/forum/solar-energy-forum/40465-solar-can-pave-way.html
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vallontina
09:54 PM on 09/10/2011
Why are we doing this when our country is trillions of dollars in debt???
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Waterlooboy
Alba gu Bràth
10:27 PM on 09/10/2011
Because it's one of the more important things that we do as a nation. Yes, even more important that food stamp programs and school lunches. And besides the money spent would probably only operate the federal government for 15 minutes or so.
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10:44 PM on 09/10/2011
How exactly is this important? even more important than feeding unemployed or underemployed and hungry schoolkids?
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MCTSilverlakeCA
retired Sr Litigation Insurance Fraud Manager
04:46 AM on 09/11/2011
yeah..like going broke as a "nation", falling behind China as a "nation", and like losing the once total respect of the rest of the world as the smartest, wealthiest, and most powerful country on the planet "nation" ...we'd be able to regain all of that and more if we put the trillions of wasted funds from exploring places we CAN'T live on- to places we CAN- like here on Planet Earth!
09:45 PM on 09/10/2011
I find a majority of these comments quite interesting and some down right funny. But on the more serious side it has given me a larger picture of the porcesses that make humans what they are. God gave us brains and we have taken ourselves so far with that. It is great to know that we are always trying to take ourselves further and further outside our comfort zone to find places that might on day be livable. Isn't that how the United States was founded? By exploration. But exploration was how we got from coutry to country. Now it is time to look beyond our little blue planet. What if there was another planet with humans on it. Hummm!
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MCTSilverlakeCA
retired Sr Litigation Insurance Fraud Manager
04:48 AM on 09/11/2011
If there is another planet with human-like people on it out there somewhere - and they are looking for us, I say "Go Back, Go Back while there;s still Time- Go Back! You'll be much happier wherever it was you came from!
10:08 AM on 09/11/2011
Actually, no, America wasn't founded by exploration. Some explorers came over here and discovered there were already people here. So, instead of looking around and going back they decided to rape, murder and destroy everything the inhabitants had and then declare the land as their own. I imagine if we try that again on a planet that has intelligent life on it, we're probably going to lose this time.
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bccmeteorites
Don't believe everything NASA says.
09:51 PM on 09/14/2011
Like in the middle east.