Science from the Moon: The NASA/NLSI Lunar University Network for Astrophysics Research (LUNAR)
Jack O. Burns (1,2), the LUNAR Consortium ((1) University of, Colorado, (2) NASA Lunar Science Institute)

TL;DR
This paper advocates for using the Moon as a unique platform for astrophysical and gravitational research, highlighting ongoing projects that leverage lunar environments for advanced scientific measurements.
Contribution
It introduces the LUNAR consortium's key projects utilizing lunar surface instruments for astrophysics and gravity studies, emphasizing the Moon's scientific potential.
Findings
Lunar radio telescopes can observe heliospheric phenomena without terrestrial interference.
Lunar Laser Ranging provides high-precision tests of General Relativity.
Lunar environment enables unique cosmological and gravitational physics experiments.
Abstract
The Moon is a unique platform for fundamental astrophysical measurements of gravitation, the Sun, and the Universe. Lacking a permanent ionosphere and, on the farside, shielded from terrestrial radio emissions, a radio telescope on the Moon will be an unparalleled heliospheric and astrophysical observatory. Crucial stages in particle acceleration near the Sun can be imaged and tracked. The evolution of the Universe before and during the formation of the first stars will be traced, yielding high precision cosmological constraints. Lunar Laser Ranging of the Earth-Moon distance provides extremely high precision constraints on General Relativity and alternative models of gravity, and also reveals details about the interior structure of the Moon. With the aim of providing additional perspective on the Moon as a scientific platform, this white paper describes key research projects in these…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPlanetary Science and Exploration
