Thermal Analyses of Apollo Lunar Soils Provide Evidence for Water in Permanently Shadowed AreasThermally-evolved-gas analyses were performed on the Apollo lunar soils shortly after their return to Earth [1-8]. The analyses revealed the presence of water evolving at temperatures above 200 C. Of particular interest are samples that were collected from permanently-shadowed locations (e.g., under a boulder) with a second sample collected in nearby sunlight, and pairs in which one was taken from the top of a trench, and the second was taken at the base of the trench, where the temperature would have been -10 to -20 C prior to the disturbance [9]. These samples include 63340/63500, 69941/69961, and 76240/76280. At the time that this research was first reported, the idea of hydrated minerals on the lunar surface was somewhat novel. Nevertheless, goethite was observed in lunar breccias from Apollo 14 [10], and it was shown that goethite, hematite and magnetite could originate in an equilibrium assemblage of lunar rocks
Document ID
20120013280
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Cooper, Bonnie L. (Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Smith, M. C. (East Tennessee State Univ. Johnson City, TX, United States)
Gibson, E. K. (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)