WHAT WE DO


JOINRENEWJOIN

Give a Gift Membership
 

Projects

International Lunar Decade


May 12, 2008
The International Lunar Network: Exploring the Moon, Together

Taking advantage of the current focus on lunar exploration, NASA is leading an international effort to establish a network of geophysical monitoring stations on the Moon. The venture, known as the "International Lunar Network," or ILN for short, seeks to place between 4 and 8 such bases at selected locations on the Moon in the next decade. Each of the nodes will be launched and operated by different national space agencies, but all will work together as a unified monitoring network. According to Jim Green, director of NASA's Division of Planetary Science, this model of international cooperation could then serve as a template for a similar venture on Mars.
read more »


This is an extraordinary time for lunar exploration. Lunar missions are in development in China, Japan, India, the United States, and Italy, and Europe just completed the successful SMART-1 mission. With so many nations, and perhaps private groups, focused on going to the Moon, The Planetary Society has proposed an International Lunar Decade to help coordinate these disparate efforts and to share the results with the world.

The International Lunar Decade commenced in 2007 with the launches of Japan's Kaguya mission (formerly known as SELENE) and China's Chang'E. It will end when humans return to the Moon -- by 2018, we hope, but at least by 2020.

The Planetary Society has long championed international cooperation both for enhancing the scientific return from space exploration and to capture the public interest that comes from global ventures. One of the chief attributes of space exploration is the inspiration it provides to the people of Earth through discovery, adventure, and great achievements.

The interest of many spacefaring nations in lunar missions is an opportunity to enhance international cooperation and to realize a benefit greater than just that of the individual missions.

The International Lunar Decade takes inspiration from the International Polar Year (2007-08), the International Space Year (1992), and, perhaps the best precedent, the International Geophysical Year (1957-58). After a considerable slow down in Antarctic exploration, the International Geophysical Year (IGY) vigorously renewed exploration of that forbidding landscape, and, in fact, triggered the Space Age, when the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1 as part of their IGY program.

We hope an International Lunar Decade might spur a similar reinvigoration of lunar exploration and perhaps lead to the next great -- and maybe even unforeseen -- step in space exploration.

The International Lunar Decade has now been endorsed by the International Lunar Exploration Working Group and COSPAR (the International Council of Scientific Unions' Committee on Space Research), and has received foundation support from the Secure World Foundation. In addition, the concept has been presented to the International Astronautical Federation General Assembly for consideration, and the Society plans to present it to the United Nations Committee on Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS).

Download the PDF of the International Lunar Decade proposal presented to Scientific Assembly of the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR).



Recent Related Headlines


More Related Headlines:  Chandrayaan-1 | Chang'e | Kaguya (SELENE) | SMART-1 | The Moon