SPACE.com Columnist Leonard David

Can NASA's Artemis moon missions count on using lunar water ice?

an illustration of a crater on the moon with Earth in the distance
(Image credit: Mark Garlick/Science Photo Library/Getty Images)

We are on the cusp of learning far more about the projected icy situation of the moon's permanently shadowed regions, or PSRs. Multiple nations are eying the moon's south pole with research teams plotting out how and where to explore the bottoms of the sun-shy features. 

In some circles, however, there are suggestions of placing a moratorium on up-close inspection of PSRs on the moon. While they might be chock full of extractable ice, it might be necessary to protect these features for the science they are likely to offer. 

A PSR can serve as "paleo-cosmic tape recorder" and should be preserved at the lunar poles. Still ahead, however, more modeling work is needed to gauge the influence of warm spacecraft, rovers, even spacesuits, upon these environments. Doing so might ensure there's no unintended fouling of such a fundamental record prior to the chance to study it.

Nevertheless, a number of new studies have identified areas of particular interest within the Artemis 3 candidate landing sites that might be hiding water ice that could be used by future human crews on the moon's surface. But how realistic is it to expect to find enough ice on the moon to support human habitats? And what issues come with mining and using resources on the moon?

Related: NASA's Artemis program: Everything you need to know

Cold traps

NASA's Artemis 3 mission — America's "rebooting of the moon" by human explorers — intends to land a human crew near the lunar south pole. The lunar south pole is located on the rim of Shackleton crater, a 13 mile (21 kilometer) diameter feature that was carved out billions of years ago by an asteroid impact. Shackleton is home of a permanently shadowed interior.

While the exact Artemis 3 landing site is still forthcoming, favorable touchdown spots are located near PSRs. There are also attractive places of lunar landscape that can offer long-duration access to sunlight and make possible direct-to-Earth communications.

The lunar south pole is bounded by summits with high illumination that can provide access to solar power in a region that also contains PSRs, areas that are "cold traps" believed to harbor volatile elements that can be turned into useful materials, radiation shielding or even rocket fuel.

A spectacular, specially produced near-ground level oblique view of the "Connecting Ridge" between Shackleton and Henson craters. The lunar south pole (SP) occurs on the rim of Shackleton crater. The ridge along the rim of the South Pole-Aitken impact basin is a potential Artemis landing site (001) and another (004) occurs on the rim of Shackleton crater.  (Image credit: ETHZ\LPI\Valentin T. Bickel and David A. Kring)

Unique locale

Considered a unique south pole locale is a "Connecting Ridge" between Shackleton and Henson craters. It may be an ideal target for future sampling tasks where a large number of features could be apprised over a short distance. 

Detailed examination of the Connecting Ridge would provide geological context for the collection of any potential resources necessary to sustain a human habitat, should this site be targeted in the future for a permanent lunar surface outpost. 

That's the view of Sarah Boazman, based at the European Space Agency's ESTEC in the Netherlands, lead author of a recent research paper diving into geologic targets near the lunar south pole.

"Investigations of the lunar south polar region should continue to assess the accessibility of features of interest, including isolated boulders, rock exposures, rocky craters, and PSRs, in preparation for upcoming missions to the area," Boazman and colleagues explains. "Such investigations will provide crucial context for any future endeavors set to explore the south pole of the moon."

These areas were picked based upon a variety of factors including proximity to permanently shadowed regions often found in near-polar craters, slope and smoothness of terrain enabling safe landing, lighting conditions and communication with Earth.  (Image credit: NASA)

Large and flat

A section of the Connecting Ridge is a little wider than a kilometer, said David Kring, principal scientist at the Universities Space Research Association's Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston, Texas. Areas exist on the ridge, he said, that are sufficiently large and flat to meet the requirements of NASA's Artemis Human Landing System, the moon machinery that will take expeditions to the lunar surface.

"The ridge is typically a few hundred meters wide and peppered with small impact craters. Some of those crater walls are steep and will need to be avoided. Shadows may also make crater walls look steeper and the crater floors deeper than they really are," Kring told Space.com.

While you might think the craters a nuisance, Kring added that they are important probes of the lunar surface. "The excavation process that produced the craters brought material from depth to the surface where astronauts can access the material," he said.

An illustration of SpaceX's Starship on the moon. In 2021, NASA announced that SpaceX won the contract to build the lunar lander for its Artemis program.  (Image credit: SpaceX)

All shapes and sizes

Pascal Lee is a planetary scientist at the SETI Institute and Mars Institute, based at NASA's Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California.

It is important to realize that PSRs come in all shapes and sizes on the moon, Lee says, from large areas that indeed can be called "regions," to much smaller patches around the base of boulders, down to nooks and crannies between regolith grains. "I think we should use the more generic expression 'permanently shadowed areas' or 'PSAs' instead."

It is also important to realize that there isn't a one-to-one match between PSRs and water ice at the lunar poles, Lee adds. 

"Some PSRs do not seem to have much hydrogen in them if any at all," says Lee, "while there are occasionally sunlit regions that, surprisingly, still show hydrogen signatures within the top meter of the regolith," the topside blanket of lunar dust, busted up rocks, and other materials.

International enterprise

In November of last year, a White House interagency working group within the National Science and Technology Council produced a cislunar technology strategy. In its pages, the strategy explains that new technologies are required to explore the moon's polar regions "that may contain significant amounts of volatile compounds that are especially important for resource utilization."

That strategy report also proposed an International Lunar Year (ILY). 

"Science is an international enterprise, and scientists have long demonstrated the ability to work across boundaries for the common good," the report explains. "A United States-led initiative to establish an International Lunar Year (ILY) can build upon the historical examples of past International Polar Years (IPY), the International Geophysical Year (IGY), and the International Space Year (ISY). 

The ILY can also demonstrate how various activities can be carried out responsibly for the benefit and in the interests of all nations, including developing countries, the report says, "while enhancing transparency and building confidence and cooperation among moon-faring entities."

Artemis base camp

Building upon the heritage of human treks to the moon between 1969 and 1972 via the Apollo program, NASA's primary goal is developing sustainable lunar exploration.

But a Lunar Exploration Analysis Group (LEAG) assessment finds that details of any Artemis Base Camp are too sketchy. 

LEAG was established in 2004 to support NASA in providing analysis of scientific, technical, commercial, and operational issues in support of lunar exploration objectives and of their implications for lunar architecture planning and prioritizing activities on the moon.

"Artemis will not be truly sustainable unless it includes a robust surface infrastructure and development strategy at a single location on the moon to catalyze and enable commercial and exploration activities. Progress to date on the Artemis 3 mission is encouraging, but details of the 'sustained' phase of the Artemis campaign are nebulous to the broader community," says a 2022 LEAG document.

Accordingly, LEAG urged NASA to articulate plans to enable the construction of the Artemis Base Camp "and establishment of large-scale resource production by 2030, thereby supporting a permanent human presence on the lunar surface and growth of a vigorous cislunar economy."

An artist's illustration of an Artemis landing craft at the lunar south pole.   (Image credit: NASA)

Property rights

Lunar mining is probably to be one of the first major tests of space property rights, says Erika Nesvold, author of the new book "Off-Earth — Ethical Questions and Quandaries for Living in Outer Space" (MIT Press, 2023).

"While outer space itself may be infinite, the valuable space resources within our reach are not, and it remains to be seen whether our system of international treaties and national laws will guide us towards cooperation, competition, or conflict over limited resources like ice on the moon," Nesvold told Space.com. 

"First come, first served" is certainly an appealing model for companies with the resources to get there first and national governments hoping to incentivize and stimulate their own private space mining industries, Nesvold adds. 

"But ethically, it conflicts with the ideal set out in the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 that activities in space should be 'carried out for the benefit and in the interests of all countries, irrespective of their degree of economic or scientific development,'" Nesvold points out.

So how best to curb potential conflict? 

"The same way we have to tackle big, thorny problems like this here on Earth," Nesvold responds, "with deliberate effort and forethought, consultation with all stakeholders, including countries not yet capable of lunar mining." There's need for serious consideration of the effects of decisions on future generations and on the lunar environment itself, "and a lot of hard work by space lawyers and diplomats."

Water tower

Meanwhile, NASA's Pascal Lee raises a cautionary flag vis-à-vis PSRs.

"I think it's still premature to talk about water as a resource at the lunar poles," Lee says. "Something becomes a 'resource' only if it's economically cheaper and less risky to extract on site than to import from elsewhere."

Lee points out that with the SpaceX Starship, the capability will exist to land 100-plus metric tons of clean, purified, ready-to-use water anywhere on the moon in one single flight. 

"You'd effectively have a water tower on the moon, complete with a tap at the bottom, exactly where you want it. That will cost maybe 10 to a few 10s of millions of dollars," says Lee. 

So the real question: When will 100 metric tons of clean, processed, water extracted at the lunar poles and positioned where we want it, cost less than a few tens of millions of dollars? 

"I'm optimistic about our lunar future," Lee concludes, "but I honestly think it's still going to be a very, very long time, if ever. The largest source of water available to the moon is the Earth."

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Leonard David
Space Insider Columnist

Leonard David is an award-winning space journalist who has been reporting on space activities for more than 50 years. Currently writing as Space.com's Space Insider Columnist among his other projects, Leonard has authored numerous books on space exploration, Mars missions and more, with his latest being "Moon Rush: The New Space Race" published in 2019 by National Geographic. He also wrote "Mars: Our Future on the Red Planet" released in 2016 by National Geographic. Leonard  has served as a correspondent for SpaceNews, Scientific American and Aerospace America for the AIAA. He was received many awards, including the first Ordway Award for Sustained Excellence in Spaceflight History in 2015 at the AAS Wernher von Braun Memorial Symposium. You can find out Leonard's latest project at his website and on Twitter.

  • Unclear Engineer
    This article raised several issues in my mind.

    One was the idea that a 'water tower" could be created on the Moon with a "Starship" cargo acting as a water tank. It seems to me that it would take a lot of specialized engineering to be able to have a "water tower" sitting on the Moon's surface - I would expect it to freeze solid and maybe rupture unless heated continuously and well insulated. I would expect an underground tank to be a better choice, both for the thermal reasons and to try to avoid a tank-draining meteroid impact.

    Another area of wonder concerns how we would transport human explorers around such difficult terrain on that part of the Moon's surface, so that they could investigate the water and other materials trapped in shadows and buried in regolith on steep slopes and at the bottoms of deep craters. We can't use helicopters on the moon - no atmosphere. So, it would be either surface crawlers or rocket propelled transporters - maybe jet packs or "LEM-like" rocket hoppers. Both seem to be potential disrupters of the frozen gases that the explorers would be seeking to discover and carefully analyze.
    Reply
  • orsobubu
    Unclear Engineer said:
    This article raised several issues in my mind.

    One was the idea that a 'water tower" could be created on the Moon with a "Starship" cargo acting as a water tank. It seems to me that it would take a lot of specialized engineering to be able to have a "water tower" sitting on the Moon's surface - I would expect it to freeze solid and maybe rupture unless heated continuously and well insulated. I would expect an underground tank to be a better choice, both for the thermal reasons and to try to avoid a tank-draining meteroid impact.

    Another area of wonder concerns how we would transport human explorers around such difficult terrain on that part of the Moon's surface, so that they could investigate the water and other materials trapped in shadows and buried in regolith on steep slopes and at the bottoms of deep craters. We can't use helicopters on the moon - no atmosphere. So, it would be either surface crawlers or rocket propelled transporters - maybe jet packs or "LEM-like" rocket hoppers. Both seem to be potential disrupters of the frozen gases that the explorers would be seeking to discover and carefully analyze.
    the use of a water tower landed from earth reminds me the novella "the martian way" by asimov, describing the rage of earthlings about the waste and robbery of water for use as propellant by space merchants
    Reply
  • mach0017
    The exhaust from hydrogen-combustion engines is water. How much hydrogen could be extracted from Lunar soil? If enough could be extracted to run these engines for power on Luna, Is there enough volume of H2O exhaust from these engines to be useful?
    Reply
  • Unclear Engineer
    You would also need oxygen to run any sort of engine on hydrogen. So, just extracting hydrogen from lunar soil doesn't get you anything useful (unless you have a not-yet-invented fusion reactor that will run on light hydrogen).

    The idea of extracting water is that you get the product of combustion, and use solar energy to separate it into the hydrogen and oxygen that you can then combust as rocket fuel.

    So, you are really running the rocket on solar energy - it is stored in the propellant and oxidizer.

    Of course, collecting rocket exhaust to use the water for some other purpose is not likely to be feasible, considering how hot it is and how fast it is moving, not to mention that the rocket is going somewhere else during the process.

    The rational way to use hydrogen and oxygen to generate power would be with a fuel cell. Again, water would be separated by using solar power, and then the energy is stored until needed and used in the fuel cell as needed.
    Reply
  • Phillip Huggan
    The slow development of industrial-scale extraction will be due to superior extraction techniques always expected. They are leaving old scrolls entombed in a China cave until a particle beam that can read ashes is perfected. There is recycling of mine tailings in streams across the world this century at often 19th century mine towns with water. I expect enough water for a chopper drone to be partially powered and the rest saved except for researching how to later extract it. All it takes is one good hidden recent comet to add to the proven reserves. I can see advantages for decontaminating comets in space. Any water near Earth to Belt orbits could even be bottle rocketed to Cis-Lunar orbit. I imagine plans for belt water run into perpetual collisions cutting the life of most projects short.
    Reply
  • Phillip Huggan
    ...I suppose they will have digging technology in 25 yrs. In 40 yrs I'm sure we will deliver water from the outer solar system. Maybe 2055 for starting industrial extraction of 10% of it? I can do a GPR CIS-lunar-based satellite observatory to look for buried crashed comets. But if they are deep I can't drill out more than a narrow core. The dust is useful for tele-operating in any similiar environment we find; we might find commonalities where environment are healthy enough to work a semester on but not live. We can crew around with tethers and wires and spider legged skyscrapers on there for future bodies's proto-typing but it is dangerous.
    Reply
  • Phillip Huggan
    I can make water from a handful of ingredients (maybe next century industrially) in vacuum. Hydrogen gas and oxygen gas are two of the precursors. If one is on the Moon it is useful and table-top R+D might be this century. If the Moon is a test for structures above dust, heavy G objects would require higher towers. I see the value of craters at either pole for longer wavelength observatories, the same field of view is mostly there as the Moon turns. I don't read particle beam R+D. But digging a hole with a particle beam is safe in a crater. If a deep deposit is found that might be the only way to get it any time soon. It is nice to get above the terminator for some stuff. The Moon maybe be asbestos infections very light. You might serve at soupy Enceladus still but it may commit you to a career away from the healthy destinations until treatments are found.
    Reply
  • Phillip Huggan
    I've tried to equate cosmic ray fluence of AECL irradiator reactors and the Lunar Surface. The Moon is a good source at the poles, so I'm wedded to NASA's search for water. Voyager is a couple hundred times weaker past the heliopause, so you get a plant research dose in a few hours. It may be a day on the Lunar surface. Samples are there for the USA to collect. I intend my satellite R+D to be in the northern Washington border. My payload is 1/2 water for a while...
    (Addenum: I'd guess most silica worlds near their star and without a magnetic core or thick atmosphere get the dusty and dry pan treatment. As useful as water would be a lunar brick made without water. My biolistics is more likely to succeed if there are bricks with little tubes exposing to cosmic rays a seed. Radishes and aloe vera look good to give the astronauts the finished product two years after. Canada may be ready for plant satellites in two decades. It would be nice to know on the Moon how important directional radiation sources are. The irradiator gets 1/2 the radish specimen improving it, the lower level constant radiation paper I read did not result in better specimens. I imagine NASA would get 80% of the IP and one of Musk's two latest rockets would lift the water from Earth. I suspect the near the ice Lunar sites will accrue expertise for successful water mining later, a dry comet maybe.)
    Reply