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The first LUNAR instruments are the Lunar X-ray Imaging and
The first LUNAR instruments are the Lunar X-ray Imaging and Spectrometry (LXIIS) spacecraft, which are designed for measuring the Sun's surface and its atmosphere. The X-ray imaging system would detect bright light from the surface of the Moon, and it would then be analyzed to determine what sort of energy has been released by the Sun's surface.
The second LUNAR instrument, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), is a rover that could provide a better understanding of lunar surface science than the previous LRO's. The LRO's mission is to help astronauts study deep-space objects in order to better understand the Martian surface and Mars.
The mission is scheduled to begin in 2020, and NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter is already working on what it hopes will be a much more complex understanding of the lunar surface science.
The LRO spacecraft will be able to collect the data from the surface of the Moon in what is known as a "Lunar Earth Survey Satellite" (LESS), which is the largest and most accurate such spacecraft ever assembled. The LESS will be powered by a solar-powered engine, which will then produce a laser pointer that will follow the lunar surface and the Martian surface until it is located.
NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will be able to collect and analyze lunar and Martian images, and the LESS will be able to follow these images for thousands of years to come.
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) has three main payloads: a ground probe (L-1) to study the lunar surface, L-2 to study an orbiter (L-3) to determine the Moon's surface, and L-4 to analyze and characterize lunar and Martian images captured by L-1 and L-2 instruments.
The L-3 and L-4 payloads will support NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. The L-3 payloads are expected to take off, land on the moon, and return to Earth.
The L-3 and L-4 satellites will carry instruments to analyze the lunar surface. The L-4 payloads will have the L-1 and L-2 payloads, and the L-3 and L-4 payloads will carry instruments to analyze the Martian surface.
The L-4 payloads will support the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO). NASA's Mars rover will help determine the
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