Abstract. In order to investigate the feasibility of ice deposits at the lunar south pole, we have integrated all relevant lunar polar data sets. These include illumination data, Arecibo ground-based monostatic radar data, newly processed Clementine bistatic radar data, and Lunar Prospector neutron spectrometer measurements. The possibility that the lunar poles harbor ice deposits has important implications not only as a natural resource for future human lunar activity but also as a record of inner solar system volatiles (e.g., comets and asteroids) over the past billion years or more. We find that the epithermal neutron flux anomalies, measured by Lunar Prospector, are coincident with permanently shadowed regions at the lunar south pole, particularly those associated with Shackleton crater. Furthermore, these areas also correlate with the • = 0 circular polarization ratio (CPR) enhancements revealed by new processing of Clementine bistatic radar echoes, which in turn are colocated with areas of anomalous high CPR observed by Arecibo Observatory on the lower, Sun-shadowed wall of Shackleton crater. Estimates of the extent of high CPR from Arecibo Observatory and Clementine bistatic radar data independently suggest that •10 km 2 of ice may be present on the inner Earth-facing wall of Shackleton crater. None of the experiments that obtained the data presented here were ideally suited for definitively identifying ice in lunar polar regions. By assessing the relative merits of all available data, we find that it is plausible that ice does occur in cold traps at the lunar south pole and that future missions with instruments specifically designed to investigate these anomalies are worthy.
IntroductionThe lunar poles have long been theorized to harbor ice deposits in permanently shadowed regions because these regions can act to cold trap volatile compounds, including water introduced into the lunar environment [Watson et al., 1961]. This is a fascinating possibility both because such deposits would serve as a natural resource for future human lunar activity and because the plausible sources of lunar water (e.g., comets and asteroids) are of inherent interest. In fact, modeling the temperatures of shadowed craters near the poles [Ingersoll et al., 1992;Salvail and Fanale, 1994; Vasavada, 1998] shows temperatures low enough to cold trap materials substantially more volatile than water ice. Studies of the transport and retention of water ice and other volatiles also support the possibility of water ice being present at the pole [Butler, 1997; Morgan and Shemansky, 1991 ]. The latter work suggested that sputtering was rapid enough to destroy slow continuous deposits of water ice, for example, from micrometeorite water, or water produced from reduction of lunar surface materials to produce water from solar wind hydrogen but that thick deposits of ice introduced by comets or large "wet" asteroids might survive by sequestering of ice by regolith overturn.•Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C. No conclusive evidence of w...