kovil wrote:Remember, these images are in the infrared, which shows kinetic energy's translation into the EM spectrum, best.
Visible light spectrum shows the 'presence' of matter best.
Thus NASA's chioce of wavelengths for the LCROSS imaging.
The visible light spectrum and infrared are both EM, and not at all far apart in wavelength. Where the peak wavelength lies is determined by the temperature of the products of the collision, and can just as easily be in the visible wavelengths as the IR. In this case, the collisional energy is pretty low (less than 1e10 joules), so I expect the anticipated temperatures were low as well, hence the decision to include IR observations. IR was used for the Earth-based observations primarily because this is required by adaptive optics systems used to boost resolution.
As comets are exactly the same composition as asteroids (comets are NOT dirty ice balls) they contribute no water to the Moon when they are accumulated by the Moon.
Comets and asteroids are certainly
not the same composition. It is possible, but unlikely, that their rocky components are similar. But comets contain substantial amounts of volatiles, mainly ices of methane, water, and carbon dioxide. These are not found in asteroids except in trace quantities, if at all. There is no doubt at all that comets contain large amounts of water, and that comets colliding with any large body will contribute that water. Whether the water from comets remains on the Moon is a complicated question, one which LCROSS is designed to investigate.