Shearer C K, McCubbin F M, Eckley S, Simon S B, Meshik A, McDonald F, Schmitt H H, Zeigler R A, Gross J, Mitchell J, Krysher C, Morris R V, Parai R, Jolliff B L, Gillis-Davis J J, Joy K H, Bell S K, Lucey P G, Sun L, Sharp Z D, Dukes C, Sehlke A, Mosie A, Allton J, Amick C, Simon J I, Erickson T M, Barnes J J, Dyar M D, Burgess K, Petro N, Moriarty D, Curran N M, Elsila J E, Colina-Ruiz R A, Kroll T, Sokaras D, Ishii H A, Bradley J P, Sears D, Cohen B, Pravdivseva O, Thompson M S, Neal C R, Hana R, Ketcham R, Welten K
Dept. of Earth & Planet. Sci., Institute of Meteoritics, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA.
Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston, TX 77058 USA.
Space Sci Rev. 2024;220(6):62. doi: 10.1007/s11214-024-01094-x. Epub 2024 Aug 20.
As a first step in preparing for the return of samples from the Moon by the Artemis Program, NASA initiated the Apollo Next Generation Sample Analysis Program (ANGSA). ANGSA was designed to function as a low-cost sample return mission and involved the curation and analysis of samples previously returned by the Apollo 17 mission that remained unopened or stored under unique conditions for 50 years. These samples include the lower portion of a double drive tube previously sealed on the lunar surface, the upper portion of that drive tube that had remained unopened, and a variety of Apollo 17 samples that had remained stored at -27 °C for approximately 50 years. ANGSA constitutes the first preliminary examination phase of a lunar "sample return mission" in over 50 years. It also mimics that same phase of an Artemis surface exploration mission, its design included placing samples within the context of local and regional geology through new orbital observations collected since Apollo and additional new "boots-on-the-ground" observations, data synthesis, and interpretations provided by Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt. ANGSA used new curation techniques to prepare, document, and allocate these new lunar samples, developed new tools to open and extract gases from their containers, and applied new analytical instrumentation previously unavailable during the Apollo Program to reveal new information about these samples. Most of the 90 scientists, engineers, and curators involved in this mission were not alive during the Apollo Program, and it had been 30 years since the last Apollo core sample was processed in the Apollo curation facility at NASA JSC. There are many firsts associated with ANGSA that have direct relevance to Artemis. ANGSA is the first to open a core sample previously sealed on the surface of the Moon, the first to extract and analyze lunar gases collected , the first to examine a core that penetrated a lunar landslide deposit, and the first to process pristine Apollo samples in a glovebox at -20 °C. All the ANGSA activities have helped to prepare the Artemis generation for what is to come. The timing of this program, the composition of the team, and the preservation of unopened Apollo samples facilitated this generational handoff from Apollo to Artemis that sets up Artemis and the lunar sample science community for additional successes.
作为阿尔忒弥斯计划为从月球带回样本做准备的第一步,美国国家航空航天局(NASA)启动了阿波罗下一代样本分析计划(ANGSA)。ANGSA旨在作为一项低成本的样本返回任务,涉及对阿波罗17号任务先前带回的样本进行管理和分析,这些样本一直未开封或在独特条件下储存了50年。这些样本包括一个先前在月球表面密封的双驱动管的下部、该驱动管未开封的上部,以及各种在约-27°C下储存了50年的阿波罗17号样本。ANGSA构成了50多年来月球“样本返回任务”的首个初步检查阶段。它还模拟了阿尔忒弥斯表面探索任务的同一阶段,其设计包括通过自阿波罗任务以来收集的新轨道观测数据以及额外的新“实地”观测、数据合成和由阿波罗17号宇航员哈里森·施密特提供的解释,将样本置于当地和区域地质背景中。ANGSA使用新的管理技术来准备、记录和分配这些新的月球样本,开发新工具以打开样本容器并从中提取气体,并应用了阿波罗计划期间无法获得的新分析仪器来揭示有关这些样本的新信息。参与该任务的90名科学家、工程师和样本管理员中的大多数在阿波罗计划期间还未出生,自上次在NASA约翰逊航天中心的阿波罗样本管理设施处理阿波罗岩芯样本以来已有30年。ANGSA有许多与阿尔忒弥斯直接相关的首次之举。ANGSA是首个打开先前在月球表面密封的岩芯样本的计划,首个提取并分析收集到的月球气体的计划,首个检查穿透月球滑坡沉积物的岩芯的计划,以及首个在-20°C的手套箱中处理原始阿波罗样本的计划。ANGSA的所有活动都有助于让阿尔忒弥斯一代为未来做好准备。该计划的时机安排、团队组成以及未开封阿波罗样本的保存,促成了从阿波罗到阿尔忒弥斯的这代际交接,为阿尔忒弥斯和月球样本科学界带来更多成功奠定了基础。