The Earth’s shadow will darken the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter in addition to the moon
By andA rendering of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.
This weekend's rare supermoon total lunar eclipse will offer a mix of risk and scientific opportunity for a NASA moon-orbiting spacecraft.
Earth's nearest neighbor will be plunged into darkness Sunday evening (Sept. 27) North American time, during an eclipse that takes place when the moon is closest to Earth during its elliptical orbit (and therefore looks abnormally big and bright in the sky). The event will thus be a " — the first such eclipse since 1982, and the last until 2033.
Earth's shadow will darken NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) as well, and that's a bit of a concern for the solar-powered probe. However, LRO has survived three other lunar eclipses in just the last 17 months, so the spacecraft's handlers are confident it will come through this one safely as well. []
Those procedures originally involved shutting down LRO's systems to save battery power and simply riding out the eclipse until the sun came out again. But as mission team members gained experience over the years — LRO launched in June 2009 — they grew confident enough to take some data during .
"The rapid cooling of the surface during an eclipse gives us a view of how the top few centimeters cool differently than during a normal lunar night," LRO deputy project scientist Noah Petro, also of NASA Goddard, said in . "From this, we learn about the size of particles at the surface."
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