NASA  

Washington University Develops Lunar Surface Instrument with NASA Support

A team led by physicist Jeff Gillis-Davis at Washington University is creating a device to analyze lunar surface chemistry, crucial for future moon missions.

Discovered 2024-03-14T06:41:55.628414-07:00 | 2024-03-14T06:41:55.628414-07:00

Sources

Related Coverage

2024-05-07T15:07:56.819874-07:002024-05-07T15:07:56.819874-07:00

NASA Funds Studies for New Climate Science Missions

2024-04-24T08:02:21.874346-07:002024-04-24T08:02:21.874346-07:00

NASA to Test Electric Lunar Dust Shield on 2024 Firefly Moon Mission

2024-04-16T11:08:24.825790-07:002024-04-16T11:08:24.825790-07:00

Goddard Center Assigned to Craft Lunar Quake Detector for 2026 Artemis III Mission

2024-04-03T20:37:53.383446-07:002024-04-03T20:37:53.383446-07:00

Advancements in Moon-Based Construction: Lunar Soil Analysis

2024-03-28T06:42:42.167191-07:002024-03-28T06:42:42.167191-07:00

Artists Conclude Moon Mission Simulation at University of Arizona

2024-03-21T21:10:02.689901-07:002024-03-21T21:10:02.689901-07:00

NASA and DLR Join Forces for Earth's Water Dynamics Mission 'GRACE'

2024-03-17T05:29:33.220539-07:002024-03-17T05:29:33.220539-07:00

NASA Delivers Gamma-Ray, Neutron Spectrometer to JAXA for Martian Moons Mission

2024-03-08T14:24:55.839281-08:002024-03-08T14:24:55.839281-08:00

Luxembourg and NASA Amplify Lunar Exploration Efforts

2024-02-27T09:04:18.902952-08:002024-02-27T09:04:18.902952-08:00

New Model Predicts Moon Dust Behavior, Aiding Lunar Robotics

Related Coverage