Unique tasks for SMART-1 in exploring the Moon
EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY NEWS RELEASE
Posted: September 14, 2001

Space scientists meeting in Berlin next week will compare their hopes for the European Space Agency's first lunar project, SMART-1, with other forthcoming missions to the Moon.

Moon
False color image of the Moon at high northern latitudes obtained during Galileo's Earth flyby. Photo: NASA/processing by DLR
 
SMART-1, to be launched at the end of 2002, should go into orbit around the Moon in 2004, after a prolonged test of solar-electric propulsion. Conventional rockets will dispatch Japan's Lunar-A in 2003 and Selene in mid-2004. Whilst important new findings about the Moon's interior and surface are expected from these Japanese spacecraft, SMART-1 remains unrivalled in its ability to map minerals and chemical elements on the Moon, using advanced infrared and X-ray instruments.

'New Views of the Moon, Europe' (17-19 September) is hosted in Berlin by the Deutschen Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR), as one of a series of meetings on 'New Views of the Moon'. It is sponsored also by ESA's Space Science Department and by the International Lunar Exploration Working Group, which unites NASA, ESA and several other space agencies around the world. These include Japan's National Space Development Agency (NASDA) and Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS).

The main objective of Lunar-A (ISAS) is to drop seismic instruments into the surface on opposite sides of the Moon, for measuring the size of the lunar core using moonquake waves. Selene (NASDA and ISAS) will observe the lunar surface from its orbit around it, before testing a technique for landing part of the spacecraft on the Moon. The aim of the international collaboration, fully evident in Berlin, is to pool results from Lunar-A, SMART-1 and Selene, in integrated data sets, together with those from recent American missions, Clementine (1994) and Lunar Prospector (1998).

"Every mission has something important to say about basic questions concerning the Moon's origin and evolution," says Bernard Foing, ESA's project scientist for SMART-1. "In Berlin we'll stress the special ability of the SIR infrared instrument on SMART-1 to map lunar minerals in greater detail than ever before, and the comprehensive inventory of key chemical elements in the lunar surface that will come from our X-ray instrument, D-CIXS. Together with the high resolution multi-colour camera AMIE, they will renew our view of the Moon."