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Bright Explosion on the Moon - presented by Science@NASA
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For the past 8 years,
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NASA astronomers have been monitoring the Moon for signs of explosions
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caused by meteoroids hitting the lunar surface.
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'Lunar meteor showers'
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have turned out to be more common than anyone expected,
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with hundreds of detectable impacts occurring every year.
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They've just seen the biggest explosion in the history of the program.
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'On March 17, 2013,
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an object about the size of a small boulder
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hit the lunar surface in Mare Imbrium,'
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says Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office.
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'It exploded in a flash
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nearly 10 times as bright as anything we've ever seen before.'
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Anyone looking at the Moon at the moment of impact
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could have seen the explosion--no telescope required.
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For about one second,
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the impact site was glowing like a 4th magnitude star.
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Ron Suggs, an analyst at the Marshall Space Flight Center,
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was the first to notice the impact in a digital video
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recorded by one of the monitoring program's 14-inch telescopes.
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'It jumped right out at me,
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it was so bright,' he recalls.
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The 40 kg meteoroid,
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measuring 0.3 to 0.4 meters wide,
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hit the Moon traveling 56,000 mph.
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The resulting explosion packed as much punch as 5 tons of TNT.
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Cooke believes the lunar impact
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might have been part of a much larger event.
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'On the night of March 17,
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NASA and University of Western Ontario all-sky cameras
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picked up an unusual number of deep-penetrating meteors
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right here on Earth,' he says.
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'These fireballs were traveling along nearly identical orbits
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between Earth and the asteroid belt.'
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This means Earth and the Moon were pelted by meteoroids
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at about the same time.
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'My working hypothesis is that the two events are related,
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and that this constitutes a short duration cluster
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of material encountered by the Earth-Moon system,' says Cooke.
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One of the goals of the lunar monitoring program
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is to identify new streams of space debris
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that pose a potential threat to the Earth-Moon system.
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The March 17th event seems to be a good candidate.
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Controllers of NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
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have been notified of the strike.
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The crater could be as wide as 20 meters,
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which would make it an easy target for LRO
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the next time the spacecraft passes over the impact site.
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Comparing the size of the crater to the brightness of the flash
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would give researchers a valuable 'ground truth' measurement
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to validate lunar impact models.
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Unlike Earth,
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which has an atmosphere to protect it,
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the Moon is airless and exposed.
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'Lunar meteors' crash into the ground with fair frequency.
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Since the monitoring program began in 2005,
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NASA's lunar impact team has detected more than 300 strikes,
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most orders of magnitude fainter than the March 17th event.
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Statistically speaking,
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more than half of all lunar meteors come from known meteoroid streams
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such as the Perseids and Leonids.
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The rest are sporadic meteors--
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random bits of comet and asteroid debris of unknown parentage.
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U.S. Space Exploration Policy
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eventually calls for extended astronaut stays on the lunar surface.
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Identifying the sources of lunar meteors
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and measuring their impact rates
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gives future lunar explorers an idea of what to expect.
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Is it safe to go on a moonwalk, or not?
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The middle of March might be a good time to stay inside.
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'We'll be keeping an eye out
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for signs of a repeat performance next year
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when the Earth-Moon system passes through the same region of space,' says Cooke.
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'Meanwhile, our analysis of the March 17th event continues.'
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For updates about explosions on the Moon
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- and elsewhere in the cosmos -
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stay tuned to science.nasa.gov.