Last Thursday (or the one before it, I can't remember), My Geology lab instructer told us they have found water on the moon earlier that day. I'm too lazy to look up an actual article on the internet. But today's school paper had this article on it. I'll type it word for word. Amazing that I'm too lazy to look for an online article, but I copied this word from word from my paper >> I don't know if any other schools were involved with this, but it still gives me a sense of pride, not only being a part of this school, but having two classes with professors involved in this science. Anyway, what do you think? Being able to use the moon as a refuel station and being able to travel even farther into the solar system seems like a big milestone for humanity. Thoughts?
That sounds fairly interesting. I doubt the amount of water is sufficient for anything significant, however. Still a great feat. Cheers on the discovery.
I'm actually more interested in finding water ice on Mars, relatively far from the polar caps. http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/080620-phoenix-ice-update.html The Moon is a great stepping stone for space, and water there would slash living costs by millions, but I can't see anything more than an outpost or two, maybe a re-fueling station being there anywhere in the foreseeable future, whereas Mars has the potential to support a full colony.