Journal Article10.1016/J.SPACEPOL.2014.08.007
Developing the global exploration roadmap: An example using the humans to the lunar surface theme
TL;DR: Mapping documents from a variety of international stakeholders can be used to cement buy-in from the current partners and attract new ones to this effort to send humans beyond low Earth orbit for the first time since Apollo.
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About: This article is published in Space Policy. The article was published on 01 Aug 2014.
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Research progress on lunar and Martian concrete
TL;DR: In this article , the preparation methods and properties of different lunar and Martian concretes were analyzed and compared, e.g., aluminate concrete, sulfur concrete, magnesia silica concrete, polymer concrete, and geopolymer concrete.
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Site selection and traverse planning to support a lunar polar rover mission: A case study at Haworth Crater
Jennifer L. Heldmann,Anthony Colaprete,Richard C. Elphic,Ben Bussey,Andrew McGovern,Ross A. Beyer,Ross A. Beyer,David Lees,Matthew Deans +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a case study for NASA's Resource Prospector (RP) mission concept for a lunar polar rover and utilize this mission architecture and associated constraints to evaluate whether a suitable landing site exists to support an RP flight mission.
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Analysis of the intellectual structure of human space exploration research using a bibliometric approach: Focus on human related factors
TL;DR: In this article, a bibliometric approach with quantitative analytical techniques is applied to study the development and growth of the research in human space exploration (HSE) with a focus on human related factors.
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Lunar Resources
Ian A. Crawford,Mahesh Anand,S. Barber,Aidan Cowley,Sarah Crites,Wenzhe Fa,Jessica Flahaut,Lisa R. Gaddis,B. Greenhagen,Junichi Haruyama,Dana M. Hurley,Claire L. McLeod,Andrew Morse,Clive R. Neal,Hannah Sargeant,Elliot Sefton-Nash,Romain Tartèse +16 more
TL;DR: This research article, "Lunar Resources", explores the Moon's potential as a natural supply station for a future space-faring civilization, highlighting its raw materials and resources that can aid humanity's development in space.
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•Posted Content
Science enabled by a Moon Village
TL;DR: A human-robotic "Moon Village" as discussed by the authors would offer significant scientific opportunities by providing an infrastructure on the lunar surface, which would help develop the use of lunar resources, which will yield additional longer-term scientific benefits.
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Hydrogen mapping of the lunar south pole using the LRO neutron detector experiment LEND.
I. G. Mitrofanov,A. B. Sanin,William V. Boynton,Gordon Chin,James B. Garvin,Dmitry Golovin,Larry G. Evans,K. Harshman,A. S. Kozyrev,Maxim Litvak,Alexey Malakhov,Erwan Mazarico,T. P. McClanahan,G. M. Milikh,Maxim Mokrousov,G. Nandikotkur,Gregory A. Neumann,I. Nuzhdin,R. Z. Sagdeev,V. V. Shevchenko,Valery Shvetsov,David E. Smith,R. D. Starr,Vladislav Tretyakov,J. Trombka,D. Usikov,A. Varenikov,Andrey Vostrukhin,Maria T. Zuber +28 more
TL;DR: The LCROSS impact site inside the Cabeus crater demonstrates the highest hydrogen concentration in the lunar south polar region, corresponding to an estimated content of 0.5 to 4.0% water ice by weight, depending on the thickness of any overlying dry regolith layer.