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The Planetary Society BlogBy Emily LakdawallaGRAIL, the next Discovery missionJan. 4, 2008 | 16:41 PST | Jan. 5 00:41 UTC
As a surprising number of you have written in to remind me, I've neglected to mention a big announcement made last month, that the next Discovery mission, to be launched in 2011, will go to the Moon. The mission is called GRAIL, which is in all caps because it is one of those belabored acronyms that NASA loves, for "Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory." Of course it's not proper for the "A" to be in the acronym as "and" isn't capitalized...thus it should be "GRIL" which I think sounds funnier, but it really begs an attempt to restructure the acronym so that the mission could be called "GIRL" instead. Just imagine the headlines: "GIRL Strips Off Moon's Outer Layers..." Sadly, I'll bet the mainstream media would pay much more attention to the mission if it were called GIRL.
To measure gravity at the Moon, GRAIL has adapted the approach from the very successful GRACE mission that is currently mapping the Earth's gravity field. In essence, GRAIL will place two nearly identical spacecraft in a low-altitude (50 km), near-circular, polar lunar orbit to perform high-precision range-rate measurements using a Ka-band ranging system. The ranging system consists of an antenna assembly for transmission and reception of range tones, a microwave assembly that generates the Ka-band signals, a processing unit for phase measurements used to measure range, and a time transfer assembly to coordinate data sampled between the two satellites. A radio beacon will be used to calibrate timing on the spacecraft by the NASA Deep Space Network. Analysis of the spacecraft-to-spacecraft range-rate data provides a direct measure of the lunar gravity field.If I'm not mistaken, the better spatial resolution comes from GRAIL's lower orbit (Kaguya has a 100-kilometer-altitude orbit while GRAIL's will be 50-kilometer); the higher accuracy comes from an inherently more accurate measurement technique.
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