Weighty video gives new understanding of Moon’s gravity

LASP News

Weighty video gives new understanding of Moon’s gravity

Video images of dust clouds kicked up by the Apollo 16 rover provide LASP scientists with clues about Moon’s gravity. (Original video courtesy NASA)

Forty years after the NASA Apollo 16 mission, a dusty video has given scientists fresh perspective on the surface of the Moon. Scientists with the LASP Colorado Center for Lunar Dust and Atmospheric Studies (CCLDAS) analyzed Apollo 16 video images of dust clouds kicked up by the rover to show that they followed ballistic trajectories, or paths taken under the force of gravity alone.

The analysis offers a unique teaching opportunity for advanced high school or early college physics classes about calculating the trajectories of projectiles. The analysis also shows that this footage could not possibly be taken on Earth.

The dust trails, or “rooster tails,” were identified in two series of images taken from the 1972 video footage of the Apollo 16 Lunar Roving Vehicle, providing scientists, teachers, and students with unique visual information about the Moon’s relatively low gravity and lack of atmosphere.

Sean Hsu, LASP scientist and co-author of the study, said, “After exactly 40 years, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first analysis of the dust clouds kicked up by a lunar roving vehicle.”

CCLDAS studies Moon dust through a combination of modeling, theory, and laboratory experiments. For more information about CCLDAS, please visit http://lasp.colorado.edu/ccldas.

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