 With NASA planning a manned-space mission to the moon by 2018, the discovery of the exact location of lunar ice is of great importance. The astrophysicists who made the discovery were lead by Dr Vincent Eke of the Institute for Computational Cosmology, at Durham University. The findings were conducted by a research team from Glasgow University and the Planetary Systems Branch, Space Science and Astrobiology Division, of NASA Ames Research Centre in California, USA. The lunar ice is a potential source of fuel and water for moon explorers.
Dr Eke’s involvement began when a scientist from the US got in touch. ‘I had an image reconstruction algorithm,’ says Dr Eke, ‘I’m usually a cosmologist, I was using it for completely different problems. I’d been working on things that were galaxy-sized or bigger until then. But he had a data set that would be suitable for putting through my piece of software.’
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