Water on the Moon and Mars
Deep beneath the red clay surface of Mars lie ancient oceans now frozen in ice sheets. The Earth's moon also has hidden water deposits, pockets embedded deep in its rocks. It's the kind of liquid treasure that NASA scientists hope to mine someday using specialized drilling tools on the Moon or Mars.To this end, 10 teams of students from universities across the country, including which a Virginia Tech team gathered Friday at the Hampton Road Convention Center to share remote controlled drill rig prototypes during the "Moon to Mars Ice and Prospecting Challenge." The event was a three-day competition that started on Thursday and ended on Saturday.
Student prototypes attempted to extract and collect most of the water from the ice buried within landscapes simulated lunar and martians, packaged inside gigantic blue tubs. It is a technology that NASA needs, as it would be easier than sending tons of water into space with astronauts, and would save millions of dollars in extracting the water there.
Photo taken by Pancam of Opportunity from a location outside of Endeavor Crater in June 2017. Credits: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Cornell / Arizona State Uni
Water is needed for life-sustaining purposes and to produce rocket fuel to bring the astronauts home. It would take a long time for missions to Mars, said Chris Jones, a NASA aerospace engineer at Langley Research Center, and reducing it is a primary goal. If astronauts could produce fuel or life support goods, such as water and oxygen, this would help significantly lighten their shipping load.
On the Moon, water deposits are mixed in the soil, probably by comets impacting the surface of our satellite. Additionally, the Moon has craters that do not receive sunlight and, as a result, remain extremely cold. If the water settles in a crater, it stays there. But because it's so cold on the moon, most machines wouldn't work well.
Billions of years ago, even on Mars, there were Earth-like oceans and glaciers, Davis said. But as the red planet began to lose its atmosphere and became colder, some oceans evaporated. But some others are still there.
NASA wants to harvest water on moon and Mars, and students think they can help
Deep beneath Mars' red clay surface lie ancient oceans now frozen into ice sheets. Earth's moon has hidden water deposits, too—pockets embedded deep inside its rocks.
It's the kind of liquid treasure scientists at NASA hope to one day mine using specialized drilling tools on the moon or Mars.
As NASA looks for new technology to use in space, the agency is mining a different treasure to help develop those tools: the ingenuity of student engineers.
To that end, 10 student teams from universities around the country—including a team from Virginia Tech—gathered Friday at the Hampton Road Convention Center to share prototypes of remote-controlled drilling machines, during the 'Moon to Mars Ice and Prospecting Challenge.' The event was a three-day competition that began Thursday and ended Saturday.
The students' prototypes attempted to extract and harvest the most water from ice buried within simulated lunar and Martian landscapes—dirt, clay, sand—packed inside giant blue tubs. It's a technology NASA needs. Rather than sending tons of water into space with the astronauts, it's easier and saves millions to extract the water there.
'The most interesting thing about this is it has to be completely hands off. It has to be done mostly autonomously,' says Shlok Agarwal, a 21-year-old senior leading the Virginia Tech team. 'This helps us explore the surface of Mars and get water there. But if we were to send this without astronauts, we can control everything on that rig from down on Earth.'
The water is needed for life-sustaining purposes and to produce rocket fuel for bringing astronauts home.
It takes plenty of mass for missions to Mars, said NASA Langley Research Center aerospace engineer Chris Jones, and reducing that is a primary goal. If astronauts can make the fuel or life support goods, such as water and oxygen, it will help lighten their shipping load.
'For every pound you might have on the surface of Mars, it might take 20 to 30, even more times that (weight) launching from Earth to get it there,' Jones said. 'Saving a few 1,000 pounds of fuel on Mars could very easily turn into tens, or hundreds of thousands of pounds leaving Earth.'
Rick Davis, the assistant director for science and exploration at NASA,scientists discovered evidence of water on the moon and Mars within the past 15 years.
On the moon, water deposits are mixed in the soil, likely from comets impacting the moon's surface, he said. Additionally, the moon has craters that don't receive sunlight and, as a result, stay extremely cold. If water is deposited in a crater, it stays there.
But because it's so cold on the moon, most machines don't work well.
'Accessing (the water) is a very tricky thing,' Davis said.
Billions of years ago. there were oceans and glaciers on Mars similar to Earth, Davis said. But as the red planet started losing its atmosphere and became more frozen, some oceans evaporated. Some are still there, but when NASA launched satellite orbiters to search for underground lakes, the agency found something unexpected.
'We found all these ice sheets,' Davis said.
For the competition, students are being judged on how much water their rigs can extract, either in the form of chips, liquid or steam, Jones said. They also will be judged on their process and how realistic their concept is for use on the moon and on Mars.
A winning team will be announced Monday, NASA Langley officials said.
Agarwal said he has been working on this project since his sophomore year and created the squad he named and now leads—the Martian Subsurface Analysis Team or MSAT. This school year, he received 80 applications from students who want to join.
Anaya Acharya, 21, a team member majoring in electrical engineering at Tech, said her mother, who has a master's in physics, encouraged her to pursue engineering.
'She always had this small guilt of not doing engineering. She was kind of one of my supporting role models,' Acharya said. 'There's hope for like, for very young engineers, who can come and develop something for the society.'
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