Lunar Water / Hydroxyl Signal Most Abundant at High Latitudes.

uploaded by mgmirkin September 26, 2009 at 10:27 am
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Lunar Water / Hydroxyl Signal Most Abundant at High Latitudes. by mgmirkin

Image Credit: ISRO/NASA/JPL-Caltech/Brown Univ./USGS

Original Caption: This image of the moon is from NASA's Moon Mineralogy Mapper on the Indian Space Research Organization's Chandrayaan-1 mission. It is a three-color composite of reflected near-infrared radiation from the sun, and illustrates the extent to which different materials are mapped across the side of the moon that faces Earth.

Small amounts of water and hydroxyl (blue) were detected on the surface of the moon at various locations. This image illustrates their distribution at high latitudes toward the poles.

Blue shows the signature of water and hydroxyl molecules as seen by a highly diagnostic absorption of infrared light with a wavelength of three micrometers. Green shows the brightness of the surface as measured by reflected infrared radiation from the sun with a wavelength of 2.4 micrometers, and red shows an iron-bearing mineral called pyroxene, detected by absorption of 2.0-micrometer infrared light.

See:
Water Molecules Found on the Moon
Mission Images - Signatures of Water
Water Detected at High Latitudes

Photo Properties
NP! ID: 2476292
Title: Lunar Water / Hydroxyl Signal Most Abundant at High Latitudes.
File Size: 1950 × 1950 – 3.21 MB

Created: Sat, 09/26/2009 - 10:27am
Modified: Sat, 09/26/2009 - 11:30am

File Type: image (jpeg)

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