Why The Moon?
It’s close
- Three days away and as accessible as GEO
- Alien yet familiar; Earth is visible to crew and TV audiences
- Moon can be reached with existing or derived launch systems
It’s interesting
- A natural laboratory for planetary science
- A platform to observe the universe
- A unique and interesting environment
- An inspiring place to learn to live and work in space
It’s useful A natural laboratory of planetary processes and history and a platform to observe the universe
The Moon is a rocky planetary object, differentiated into crust, mantle, and core. It has a heavily cratered surface; partly flooded by lava flows over 3 billion years ago. Since then, the surface has remained unaltered except for impacts by comets and asteroids, grinding up surface into chaotic upper layer of debris (regolith). Regolith is easily accessed and processed; likely feedstock for resource extraction. Billions of years of the Sun's interaction with the regolith has also deposited and induced useful volatiles.
The Value of Lunar Resources
Materials on the Moon can be processed to make hydrogen and oxygen for use on the Moon and for export to Earth- Moon (cislunar) space. Propellant produced on the Moon can make travel within and through cislunar space routine. This eventuality will completely change the spaceflight paradigm.
Materials on the Moon
Energy on the Moon
- Solar illumination lasts 14 days at lunar equator; extended Sun visibility near poles
- Solar 3He also implanted on dust grains at ~20 ppb concentrations; may ultimately be used as fusion energy source