SA space agency reports on its role in latest US Moon probe mission

25th April 2014 By: Keith Campbell - Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

SA space agency reports on its role in latest US Moon probe mission

An artist’s impression of Ladee in its initial orbit above Moon
Photo by: Nasa Ames

The Space Operations division of the South African National Space Agency (Sansa) on Friday released details of its involvement in the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (Nasa’s) Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (Ladee, pronounced Laddie) mission, which has been successfully concluded. The Ladee mission was launched in September 2013, started orbiting the Moon at an altitude of 250 km on October 6, and concluded with the space probe, making a planned impact on the lunar surface on April 17.

“We have been supporting this mission since the date of launch,” reported Sansa Space Operations international business manager Tiaan Strydom. “Our team played an important role in providing various TT&C [telemetry, tracking and control] support services to the probe since launch in September 2013, with this coming to an end as the final manoeuvres were executed together with other ground stations, tasking the probe to deorbit.”

The deorbiting proceedure put Ladee on a course to crash into the surface of the far side of the Moon. According to Nasa, the probe would have been travelling at 3 600 mph (about 5 380 km/h) when it impacted. The US agency hopes, in due course, to image the crash site from another of its space probes, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, which was launched in June 2009.

Ladee’s primary mission was to collect detailed data on the Moon’s very tenuous atmosphere, including its density and composition, as well as any temporal and/or spatial variation in that atmosphere. It also studied conditions near the Lunar surface and environmental influences on Moon dust. It started gathering data in November, when its orbital altitude had been reduced to between 20 km and 60 km. (This altitude variation was due to the Moon’s uneven gravitational field.)

On the conclusion of its 100-day primary science phase in March, the Ladee mission was extended. Thereafter, lacking the fuel to achieve a stable Lunar orbit, the probe was deorbited, which had the benefit of allowing it to gather data from ever lower altitudes, until it disappeared behind the Moon for the last time.

“We would like to consider ourselves as the leading ground station on the continent,” stated Sansa Space Operations MD Raoul Hodges. “Being part of such cutting-edge research and services proves that no mission is too big or too small for our capabilities.”