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Lunar Polar Ice Not Present

pclark999 writes "The New Scientist reports that radar probes of the lunar polar region has disproved earlier theories regarding large sheets of polar ice in craters permanently in the shade. "

3 of 339 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Time for plan B by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 5, Informative
    Also Earth is pretty much a sealed ecosystem

    Say WHAT?

    (although we get tonnes of stuff from space every day)...

    Yeah, like, uh, sunlight?

    You know... that bright stuff without which 99.9% of this ecosystem could not exist?

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  2. Not necessarily... by Zocalo · · Score: 5, Informative
    The BBC News site has been carrying a summary of a Nature article on this since yesterday. The telling quote is "The observations, from the Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico, do not rule out ice". The conclusion seems to have been that the ice might still be present, but rather than being thick sheets can only be in small grains or thin sheets. There is also the possiblity of sub-surface ice since the probes can only reach to a depth of several meters into the surface dust.

    Roll on the ESA's Smart 1 probe next year which will hopefully resolve the issue.

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  3. Re:No such thing as permanent shade by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 5, Informative
    This is a common misunderstanding of the moon. No place on the moon is ever permanently in the shade (excepting something like a cave of course). This comes from the mishandled use of the phrase "dark side of the moon".

    This is a common misunderstanding of what is meant by permanent shading on the moon. Note the phrase "polar ice" is key here.

    In the polar regions, the sun is very low in the sky and there are places in deep craters where the sunlight, at any point in the Lunar day, never reaches.

    It's the same as on the Earth. The bottom of a deep canyon near the south pole would never receive direct sunlight. The sun never moves above a certain altitude in the sky. Heck, the tilt of the Earth's axis give the poles permanent night (well, twilight) for six months. Not sure what the Moon's tilt is offhand, but that's a side issue.

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