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New Photos of Apollo Landing Sites from Lunar Orbit

147
wahabicorridor7/18/2009 12:58:40 pm PDT

re: #145 Jim in Virginia

but we weren’t sure whether the LEM would sink into the dust and be unable to get out.

Just for you.

NASA is again shooting for the moon, but before a manned mission can get off the ground, scientists must solve a vexing technological challenge: dust.
As the Apollo 11 astronauts found out when they walked onto the moon 40 years ago Monday, lunar dust is downright treacherous. To the naked eye, it looks powdery, almost fluffy. But each particle is jagged. Dust scratched the astronauts’ visors, ground into the joints of their spacesuits, clogged their equipment, and — after they inadvertently tracked it into their living quarters — lodged in their lungs.

“It gets into everything,” says Jeff Hanley, who manages NASA’s next-generation rocket program. “Dust is one of the biggest challenges we face.”