http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8107197.stm
I find this launch of a probe more interesting than say, one to Mars, because the moon is the only non-Earth object man has travelled to. It'll be cool to see the old remnants of the previous Apollo missions still where they were the last time astronauts leftBBC wrote:
Nasa has successfully launched two spacecraft to the Moon on missions that will pave the way for a return to the lunar surface by US astronauts.
LRO (Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter) and a crater observation mission blasted off from Florida on an Atlas V rocket.
Data gathered by LRO will help mission planners select future landing sites and scout locations for lunar outposts.
The second mission will send a rocket crashing into the Moon to scour the debris plume for evidence of water ice.
The Atlas main launcher, carrying both payloads, roared up from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 2232 BST (1732 local time) - the third and last of Thursday's three launch opportunities.
Thunderstorms around the launch site prevented a launch of the rocket at the original time of 2212 BST (1712 local time).
LRO will enter a low polar orbit around the Moon at an altitude of around 50km (31 miles) - the closest any spacecraft has continually orbited Earth's natural satellite.
It will spend at least one year orbiting the Moon, using its six instruments to collect detailed information about the lunar environment.