The launch of SMART-1, Europe’s first mission to the Moon, is due to
take place in the early hours of Sunday 28th September (12.02 a.m. BST).
The Mission was due to launch in August but due to technical problems
with one of the other satellites onboard the Ariane 5 rocket, the
mission was delayed.
SMART-1, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) lunar probe will be launched
from Kourou in French Guiana powered only by an ion engine which Europe
will be testing for the first time as the main spacecraft propulsion.
Onboard will be D-CIXS, an X-ray spectrometer built by scientists and
engineers in the UK, which will provide information on what the Moon is
made of.
Once it has arrived at the Moon (expected to be in January 2005),
SMART-1 will perform an unprecedented scientific study of the Moon-
providing valuable information which will shed light on some of the
unanswered questions. The spacecraft will search for signs of water-ice
in craters near the Moon’s poles, provide data on the still uncertain
origin of the Moon and reconstruct its evolution by mapping and the
surface distribution of minerals and key chemical elements.
A launch event is taking place at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in
Oxfordshire. See Notes to Editors for further details.
For further information please see previous releases
Contacts
PPARC Press Office
Peter Barratt
Tel: 01793 442025. Mobile: 0787 9602899.
Email: peter.barratt@pparc.ac.uk
Gill Ormrod
Tel: 01793 442012. Mobile: 0781 8013509.
Email: gill.ormrod@pparc.ac.uk
CCLRC Press Office
Jacky Hutchinson
Tel: 01235 446482. Mobile: 0777 55 85 811 (available on Sunday)
Email: j.hutchinson@cclrc.ac.uk
BNSC
Steve Warren
Tel: 020 7215 0806. Email: Steven.Warren@bnsc.gsi.gov.uk
ESA Press Office
Franco Bonacina
Tel: +33 (0) 15369 7155. Email: Franco.Bonacina@esa.int
Giuseppe Racca, ESA SMART-1 Project Manager, Science Programme Directorate
Tel: +31 71 565 4618. E-mail: Giuseppe.Racca@esa.int
Bernard Foing, ESA SMART-1 Project Scientist, Science Programme Directorate
Tel: + 31 71 565 5647. E-mail: Bernard.Foing@esa.int
UK Science Contacts
D-CIXS
Principal Investigator – Professor Manuel Grande (in Kourou)
CCLRC, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
Tel: 01235 446501. Mobile: 07770 652547.
Email: M.Grande@rl.ac.uk
Instrument Scientist – Dr Sarah Dunkin (available on Saturday and Sunday)
CCLRC, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory/University College London
Tel: 01235 446861. Mobile: 07780 955580.
Email: S.K.Dunkin@rl.ac.uk
Notes to Editors
Launch Night Event
A launch night event is being held at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
in Oxfordshire. There will be a short programme of talks followed by
live coverage of the launch event in Kourou. For further details please
contact Jacky Hutchinson at the CCLRC Press Office. Tel: 01235 446482.
Mobile: 0777 55 85 811. Email: j.hutchinson@cclrc.ac.uk
Great British Cheese Festival
SMART-1 will be featured at the Great British Cheese Festival which
takes place at Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire on 27-28 September,
helping to dispel the myth that the moon is made of cheese!
For further information including a lunar recipe please see:-
http://www.cclrc.ac.uk/Activity/ACTIVITY=News2003;SECTION=4725;
Mission updates
The SMART-1 launch phone line is 01235 446433. This will be updated with
the latest information available nearer the time of the launch. The live
coverage of the launch will be web streamed
http://www.sstd.rl.ac.uk/launches/
The Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (PPARC) is the UK’s
strategic science investment agency. It funds research, education and
public understanding in four broad areas of science – particle physics,
astronomy, cosmology and space science.
PPARC is government funded and provides research grants and studentships
to scientists in British universities, gives researchers access to
world-class facilities and funds the UK membership of international
bodies such as the European Organisation for Nuclear Research, CERN, the
European Space Agency and the European Southern Observatory. It also
contributes money for the UK telescopes overseas on La Palma, Hawaii,
Australia and in Chile, the UK Astronomy Technology Centre at the Royal
Observatory, Edinburgh and the MERLIN/VLBI National Facility.