The new discovery comes from remote observation of the moon’s surface by an infrared telescope on SOFIA, a modified Boeing 747 airplane that flies high in Earth’s atmosphere and scans the moon’s surface. The instruments aboard the observatory detected subtleties in the moonlight at a wavelength of 6 microns, which the researchers believe is an unambiguous signal of water. “Only molecular water can create a 6-micron band,” (Casey Honniball, a research fellow at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center) said.
Lunar water could be used not only for sustenance, but to refuel a ship for return trips to Earth. Water is heavy. If sufficient water exists on the Moon, lunar exploration and even colonization could be much more practical than we believed.
Nestlé was reportedly interested in funding the next moon landing.