Apollo 16: Footsteps Under High Sun
07.08.10
High-sun image of the Apollo 16 landing site showing the lunar module
descent stage, various pieces of equipment, and disturbed lunar soil
(seen as darker lines and areas) which marks where John Young and
Charles Duke traversed in the spring of 1972. The labels on the image are for the Lunar Module (LM), the Lunar Roving
Vehicle (LRV), the Apollo Lunar Surface Experiments Package (ALSEP), the
Radioisotopic Thermoelectric Generator (RTG) that powered the ALSEP, and
a line of geophones (devices that take seismic readings) that extended west by northwest from the ALSEP station. LROC image M109134835L,
296 meters across (about 971 feet). Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/Arizona State University
(No larger image available.)
|
The lunar module Orion landed in the Descartes Highlands of the moon on
April 21, 1972. The Apollo 16 mission targeted a highland region.
Originally thought to be a volcanic site, the samples returned by Apollo
16 actually indicated that the highlands of the moon primarily consist
of impact-formed rocks (breccias), a substantial scientific result.
Today's featured image is an LROC NAC image of the Apollo 16 landing
site, acquired when the sun was nearly overhead, in contrast to a
previous image of the site. High sun causes white and metallic artifacts
left on the surface by Young and Duke to stand out in high contrast as they
reflect the noon-day sun back at LROC. The Apollo 16 astronauts churned
up the lunar soil (regolith) as they moved about exploring the moon, and
this disturbed material shows up as dark lines and patches. Since the
astronauts spent a fair amount of time around the Lunar Module during
their three extra-vehicular activities, the bright lunar module appears
to have a dark halo. The same dark halo appears around the parked rover.
LROC Wide Angle Camera monochrome mosaic of the Cayley Plains (smooth
areas) and Descartes Mountains surrounding the Apollo 16 landing site
(arrow indicates approximate position of the lunar module). Image
M116215423M, scene width is 65 km (about 40 miles). Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/Arizona State University
› Larger image
This location has been identified as a region of interest because many important scientific questions could be answered by
studying it. For example, like other Apollo landing sites, the
artifacts left at the Apollo 16 site provide a record of space
weathering at the site since 1972. Various planned (and accidental) long
duration exposure experiments (like NASA's Long Duration Exposure
Facility, experiments on Mir, etc.) have been studied, but all of these
have been from facilities in low-Earth orbit. Studying what decades of
exposure to the lunar environment does to hardware will provide key
inputs to engineers designing future systems to operate for long periods
in extra-terrestrial environments, such as the moon, Mars, asteroids and others.
The Apollo 16 site also provides access to highlands regolith and rocks;
highlands rocks make up about 70 percent of the lunar surface, and this landing
site would be a great place to study additional samples that would help
us characterize the materials that comprise the majority of the lunar
surface.
Browse the full-sized image at the
LRO Camera website maintained by Arizona State University.