The space agency said Thursday the Mini Lunar Volatiles Mission or MiLUV aims to determine the locations of water on the moon; and study water migration to the lunar surface including permanently shadowed areas.
University of Hawaii researcher Paul Lucey and Goddard instrument experts will join Petro for the study funded by NASAâs Planetary Science Deep Space SmallSat Studies program.
The researchers will use a Goddard instrument-based laser spectrometer to detect lunar surface water.
The spectrometer employs its own source of light to operate at both day and night.
âWe believe that the best-suited instrument to answer where these volatiles exist and their possible movement is a laser spectrometer that measures surface reflectance at several wavelengths,” Petro said.
The effort follows previous studies on evaporating volatiles and water found on the moon such as 1994’s Clementine mission.
To date, existing satellites have discovered three types of water sources on the moon:Â a global one-molecule layer of hydroxide and water;Â subsurface polar water ice; and polar surface water frost.