
NASA officials and scientists spent the better part of an hour in this
morning's press conference patting themselves on the back. The LCROSS
mission in search of lunar water was a great success, they said, all
the while ignoring a very large elephant in the room: No one among the
millions watching as a 2-ton hunk of metal slammed into the moon could
see the much-ballyhooed spray of dust and debris that they had been
told to look for.
Even LCROSS scientists have seen nothing of a
debris plume. "I'm not necessarily surprised," said LCROSS principal
investigator Anthony Colaprete of NASA's Ames Research Center in
Mountain View, California. In exploration, "you just never know how
these things are going to go. We just have to go back with a
finer-tooth comb." Colaprete's dogged optimism is grounded in enticing
spectroscopic changes detected ... Read more »