Jennifer L. Heldmann, Anthony Colaprete, Diane H. Wooden, Robert F. Ackermann, David D. Acton, Peter R. Backus, Vanessa Bailey, Jesse G. Ball, William C. Barott, Samantha K. Blair, Marc W. Buie, Shawn Callahan, Nancy J. Chanover, Young Jun Choi, Al Conrad, Dolores M. Coulson, Kirk B. Crawford, Russell DeHart, Imke De Pater, Michael Disanti, James R. Forster, Reiko Furusho, Tetsuharu Fuse, Tom Geballe, J. Duane Gibson, David Goldstein, Stephen A. Gregory, David J. Gutierrez, Ryan T. Hamilton, Taiga Hamura, David E. Harker, Gerry R. Harp, Junichi Haruyama, Morag Hastie, Yutaka Hayano, Phillip Hinz, Peng K. Hong, Steven P. James, Toshihiko Kadono, Hideyo Kawakita, Michael S. Kelley, Daryl L. Kim, Kosuke Kurosawa, Duk Hang Lee, Michael Long, Paul G. Lucey, Keith Marach, Anthony C. Matulonis, Richard M. McDermid, Russet McMillan, Charles Miller, Hong Kyu Moon, Ryosuke Nakamura, Hirotomo Noda, Natsuko Okamura, Lawrence Ong, Dallan Porter, Jeffery J. Puschell, John T. Rayner, J. Jedadiah Rembold, Katherine C. Roth, Richard J. Rudy, Ray W. Russell, Eileen V. Ryan, William H. Ryan, Tomohiko Sekiguchi, Yasuhito Sekine, Mark A. Skinner, Mitsuru Sôma, Andrew W. Stephens, Alex Storrs, Robert M. Suggs, Seiji Sugita, Eon Chang Sung, Naruhisa Takatoh, Jill C. Tarter, Scott M. Taylor, Hiroshi Terada, Chadwick J. Trujillo, Vidhya Vaitheeswaran, Faith Vilas, Brian D. Walls, Jun Ihi Watanabe, William J. Welch, Charles E. Woodward, Hong Suh Yim, Eliot F. Young
Space Science Reviews 167(1-4) 93-140 2012年5月
NASA's LCROSS (Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite) mission was designed to explore the nature of previously detected enhanced levels of hydrogen near the lunar poles. The LCROSS mission impacted the spent upper stage of the launch vehicle into a permanently shadowed region of the lunar surface to create an ejecta plume. The resultant impact crater and plume were then observed by the LCROSS Shepherding Spacecraft as well as a cadre of telescopes on the Earth and in space to determine the nature of the materials contained within the permanently shadowed region. The Shepherding Spacecraft then became a second impactor which was also observed by multiple assets. The LCROSS Observation Campaign was a key component of the LCROSS mission. The goal of the Observation Campaign was to realize the scientific benefits of extending the LCROSS observations to multiple ground and space-based assets. This paper describes the LCROSS Observation Campaign and provides an overview of the Campaign coordination and logistics as well as a summary of the observation techniques utilized at a multitude of observatories. Lessons learned from the LCROSS Observation Campaign are also discussed to assist with the planning of future unique observing events. © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.