Science
APOLLO measures Moon distance to 1 millimeter; also helps with gravity | APOLLO measures Moon distance to 1 millimeter; also helps with gravity |
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| by William Atkins | |
| Wednesday, 24 October 2007 | |
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This is the most exacting measurement ever performed on the Moon-Earth distance. In the 1970s, during the time of the NASA Apollo missions, the average distance from the center of the Moon to the center of the Earth was thought to be about 238,700 miles (384,200 kilometers)—with an accuracy of about 25 centimeters (10 inches). In the 1980s, during the early space shuttle missions, that distance accuracy was cut to about 2 centimeters (less than one inch). Now, it has been reduced to about 1 millimeter, about the thickness of a paperclip. The researchers who made this measurement are Thomas “Tom” W. Murphy, Jr., Eric G. Adelberger (University of Washington, Seattle), J.B.R. Battat (Harvard-Smithsonian Center of Astrophysics), L.N. Carey (UW, Astronomy Department), C.D. Hoyle (Humboldt State University), P. LeBlanc (UC, San Diego), E.L. Michelsen (UC, San Diego), K. Nordtvedt (Northwest Analysis, Bozeman), A.E. Orin (UC, San Diego), Jana D. Strasburg (Pacific National Laboratory, Richland), Christopher W. Stubbs (Harvard University), H.W. Swanson (UW, Seattle), and E. Williams (UC, San Diego). Their paper is titled “APOLLO: the Apache Point Observatory Lunar Laser-ranging Operation: Instrument Description and First Detections”. Murphy, the head of the study, is a University of California, San Diego researcher. The APOLLO is considered a high-tech, next-generation lunar laser ranging apparatus. It is hooked up to the 3.5-meter telescope at the Apache Point Observatory in southern New Mexico, near Sunspot, New Mexico. According to the abstract to their paper, the APOLLO “has achieved one-millimeter range precision to the moon which should lead to approximately one-order-of-magnitude improvements in the precision of several tests of fundamental properties of gravity.”
The APOLLO instrument measures the round-trip travel time of laser pulses bounced off devices called lunar retroreflectors, which are positioned on the Moon’s surface. The time measurement of these pulses are within a few picoseconds (where one picosecond is equal to one-trillionth of a second), which corresponds to about one millimeter of distance between the Earth and the Moon.
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