Annual International Observe the Moon Night Open to Public

By News Release | August 29, 2014

NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center celebrates the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter with the fifth annual International Observe the Moon Night.

 

NASA

NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Visitor Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, will host a public event on September 6 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. EDT to celebrate five years of observing the moon. This free event is for families with middle-school-aged children and older.

This is the fifth anniversary of International Observe the Moon Night (InOMN), a public campaign to celebrate and observe Earth’s nearest neighbor. InOMN was established shortly after the launch of NASA‘s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), which is celebrating its fifth year in orbit around the moon.

Highlights of this year’s InOMN event at the Goddard Visitor Center will include a talk on the top science results from LRO’s first five years, an exhibit of images in LRO’s recently released “Moon as Art” collection, and a lunar story time for children. In another talk, a member of Goddard’s Scientific Visualization Studio will discuss the LRO Earthrise video, which recreates the moment when the Apollo 8 crew captured the first color photograph of Earth taken by a person in lunar orbit.

This year’s InOMN event will also feature:
• Hands-on activities
• Talks with scientists and engineers
• Telescope viewing and more

Visitors will also have an opportunity to interact with several new exhibits about the moon that were recently installed at the Visitor Center, including standing in the boot print of an Apollo astronaut, viewing a lunar rock returned by Apollo astronauts, and touching a model of the lunar surface made using LRO data. Other new exhibits focus on the clues that Earth rocks and man-made simulants provide for scientists studying how the moon’s surface formed and has changed over time.

The InOMN team includes science and education enthusiasts from the United States and around the world. The team stays abreast of current lunar scientific discoveries and brings them to the public’s attention.

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