November 5, 2020
NASA recently announced that - for the first time - we've confirmed the water molecule, H2O, in sunlit areas of the Moon. This indicates that water is widely distributed across the lunar surface.
Did we already know water existed on the Moon?
In the late 2000s, a number of missions including the Indian Space Research Organization's Chandrayaan-1, and NASA's Cassini and Deep Impact detected hydration on the lunar surface – but these missions could not determine if the signals were hydroxyl (OH) or water (H2O).
During this same time period, using ultra high precision laboratory equipment, scientists also found water molecules locked in glasses and minerals in the samples returned by the Apollo missions.
Since then, numerous missions have made similar detections, including our Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and LCROSS missions. The majority of signals come from permanently shadowed regions – craters at the Moon's poles that never see sunlight. These areas are so cold that water within them gets trapped and can't evaporate.
In 2019, data from the LADEE mission revealed that OH and/or H2O existed on the Moon, beyond the permanently shadowed regions, and is expelled through micrometeorite impacts.
What is new about the results from the SOFIA mission?