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Lasers at the lunar poles could help: Great progress!

by nasaspacenews
June 4, 2026
in Technology
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Lasers at the lunar poles could help
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Lasers at the lunar poles could help Artemis missions establish precise GPS-like navigation systems. By placing ultrastable silicon cavities in dark, cold craters, scientists aim to create a revolutionary atomic clock.

Physicist Jun Ye and his team propose installing super-stable lasers within permanently shadowed craters. These installations utilize the extreme cold and darkness of the lunar south pole to minimize thermal jitter and measurement interference.

This technology provides essential infrastructure for upcoming lunar exploration. By utilizing silicon resonant cavities, researchers can develop high-precision timing signals and communication links between the Earth and the Moon to support long-term habitation.

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • Discovering how lasers at the lunar poles could help establish precise navigation
  • Designing for extreme lunar environments
    • The role of cold and high vacuum
    • Scientific importance and theories
    • Revolutionizing extraterrestrial timekeeping
    • Deployment steps for Artemis taikonauts
    • Implications and what comes next
    • Conclusion

Discovering how lasers at the lunar poles could help establish precise navigation

Lasers at the lunar poles could help establish precise navigation by utilizing ultrastable silicon cavities in cold, shadowed craters. This technology provides a GPS-like signal, enabling high-precision distance measurements and timing for future extraterrestrial missions.

Permanent shadows provide the most ideal environment for super-stable lasers. Temperatures at 50 Kelvin significantly reduce random jitter, allowing mirrored surfaces to reflect beams with unprecedented accuracy and stability across the lunar surface.

These installations utilize silicon resonant cavities to lock light frequencies. Astronauts will deploy these devices into deep craters using rovers to ensure total protection from solar radiation and seismic noise.

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Designing for extreme lunar environments

An image of the Moon's South Pole colored by elevation ranging from -8 to 8 km
An image of the Moon’s South Pole colored by elevation ranging from -8 to 8 km

Stability depends on protecting the laser from external vibrations like moonquakes. The team at JILA designed a specialized cavity mount to mitigate seismic noise. By simulating shaky activity on Earth, they ensure that lasers at the lunar poles could help maintain frequency consistency despite the Moon’s natural tremors.

The role of cold and high vacuum

Craters in the polar regions have a higher vacuum than space, which reduces vibrations from sound waves. This environment ensures that radiated heat remains the only major factor for researchers to manage during deployment.

 

Feature Benefit
50 Kelvin Temp Reduces thermal jitter
High Vacuum Eliminates sound vibration
Permanent Shadow Protects silicon cavities

Scientific importance and theories

Theories suggest these lasers could serve as a detection network for gravitational waves. By measuring distances with extreme precision, lasers at the lunar poles could help create a lunar-based LIGO system. This would allow scientists to detect ripples in spacetime more effectively than terrestrial observatories.

Revolutionizing extraterrestrial timekeeping

A lunar laser locked to an ultrastable silicon cavity placed inside one of the Moon’s permanently shadowed craters
A lunar laser locked to an ultrastable silicon cavity placed inside one of the Moon’s permanently shadowed craters

Establishing an optical atomic clock on the Moon requires incredible stability. By tuning light signals to satellite atomic clocks, lasers at the lunar poles could help provide a timekeeping signal that rivals Earth’s most accurate instruments for future deep-space navigation.

Deployment steps for Artemis taikonauts

Fully assembled silicon optical cavities will be small enough to fit inside the Artemis spacecraft. This multi-step process ensures that the infrastructure is safely delivered and positioned for maximum navigational efficiency during polar missions:

  • Silicon cavities are fully assembled on Earth for transport.
  • Radiation panels unfold after reaching the lunar surface.
  • Astronauts use rovers to lower cavities into deep craters.
  • Stable mirrors allow light frequencies to resonate perfectly.

Implications and what comes next

Tests in low-Earth orbit are expected within the next two years. Following successful trials, lasers at the lunar poles could help researchers deploy the first operational units within three to five years.

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This infrastructure will eventually support Earth-Moon optical communication and satellite-based space distance measurements. Establishing these networks is a critical step toward a long-term human presence and scientific exploration.

Conclusion

Establishing ultrastable infrastructure is the key to deep-space autonomy and mission success. By providing high-precision navigation and timing, lasers at the lunar poles could help humanity reach the stars. Explore more on our YouTube channel—join NSN Today.

Tags: #Artemis#LaserPhysics#LunarNavigation#NASA#SpaceTechnology

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