Back to the Moon: The Scientific Rationale for Resuming Lunar Surface Exploration
I. A. Crawford, M. Anand, C. S. Cockell, H. Falcke, D. A. Green, R., Jaumann, M. A. Wieczorek

TL;DR
This paper advocates for resuming lunar surface exploration to unlock scientific insights into the Solar System's history, planetary evolution, and fundamental physics, emphasizing the benefits of both robotic and human missions.
Contribution
It provides an interdisciplinary review of lunar science objectives and argues for integrating robotic and human exploration to achieve these goals effectively.
Findings
Lunar surface offers unique scientific opportunities in multiple disciplines.
Resuming exploration requires new scientific instruments and sample return missions.
Human operations significantly enhance scientific outcomes.
Abstract
The lunar geological record has much to tell us about the earliest history of the Solar System, the origin and evolution of the Earth-Moon system, the geological evolution of rocky planets, and the near-Earth cosmic environment throughout Solar System history. In addition, the lunar surface offers outstanding opportunities for research in astronomy, astrobiology, fundamental physics, life sciences and human physiology and medicine. This paper provides an interdisciplinary review of outstanding lunar science objectives in all of these different areas. It is concluded that addressing them satisfactorily will require an end to the 40-year hiatus of lunar surface exploration, and the placing of new scientific instruments on, and the return of additional samples from, the surface of the Moon. Some of these objectives can be achieved robotically (e.g. through targeted sample return, the…
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