摘要:After decades of lunar exploration since the Apollo era, lunar samples have become the largest treasure returned by human beings,
Second Announcement
International Lunar Sample Research Symposium 2025
Hong Kong SAR, China
Nov. 21-24, 2025
After decades of lunar exploration since the Apollo era, lunar samples have become the largest treasure returned by human beings, as they have unlimited potentials to understand the Earth-Moon system. So far, lunar samples have been collected by USA’s Apollo-11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17 missions, Soviet Union’s Luna 16, 20, 24 missions, and China’s Chang’e-5, 6 missions, and recovered as lunar meteorites. The recent acquisition of Chang’e-5 samples from the youngest mare region in the Procellarum KREEP Terrance, the Chang’e-6 samples from the lunar farside in the South Pole Aitken basin, and the recent opening of NASA’s Apollo samples in the Apollo Next Generation Sample Analysis program bring a new era of lunar sample studies that are likely to solve the most significant questions of lunar science lasting since the Apollo era.
To share the recent findings of Chang’e-5, 6, Apollo, Luna samples, lunar meteorites, and other lunar sample related studies, to prepare for future lunar sample return analyses such as those returned by China’s and USA’s human lunar missions, and to foster international cooperation in lunar sample studies of China and their international partners, the Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at The University of Hong Kong (HKU) jointly propose this International Lunar Sample Research Symposium on November 21-24, 2025. It aims to present the most intriguing findings from all kinds of lunar sample studies, including but not limited to:
01) Lunar Sample Return Missions
02) Origin of the Moon
03) Lunar Differentiation
04) Lunar Magmatism
05) Lunar Magnetism
06) Lunar Impact Processes and Chronology
07) Lunar Meteorites
08) Lunar SpaceWeathering
09) Lunar Volatiles
10) Lunar Resources
11) Lunar Analogues
12) New Techniques
Important Dates
First Announcement:
Sept. 1, 2025
Abstract Submission & Registration Opens:
Sept. 1, 2025
Second Announcement:
Oct. 6, 2025
Abstract Submission Closes:
Oct. 25, 2025
Abstract Presentation Mode Announced:
Nov. 1, 2025
Conference Program Announced:
Nov. 10, 2025
Online Registration Closes:
Nov. 15, 2025
Onsite Registration:
Nov. 21-23, 2025 (If quota left)
Conference Presentation:
Nov. 22-23, 2025
Departure:
Nov. 24, 2025
Host Organizations
Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, the University of Hong Kong
Co-Hosts
GIG-CAS & HKU Joint Laboratory of Chemical Geodynamics
NWU-HKU Joint Center of Earth and Planetary Sciences
Laboratory for Space Research, The University of Hong Kong
Venue
Yuet Ming Auditorium, Main Campus, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
Organizing Committee
Chairs of Organizing Committee:
Prof. Fuyuan Wu, Prof. Guochun Zhao
Local Organizing Committee:
Prof. Wei Yang (yangw@mail.iggcas.ac.cn)
Dr. Yuqi Qian (yuqiqian@hku.hk)
Invitation Letter:
Dr. Zhaopeng Chen (chenzp@hku.hk)
Registration
Supported by IGG-CAS, HKU, and UGC, registration fees are not being collected for the International Lunar Sample Research Symposium 2025, but registration is indeed required for all attendees at http://www.ilsrs.org.
Keynote Speakers
Institute of Geology and Geophysics, CAS
Fuyuan Wu
TITLE: Lunar Sample Studies: The Chang'e Era
BIOGRAPHY: Prof. Fuyuan Wu earned his B.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees from Changchun College of Geology. His research focuses on granite petrogenesis and continental dynamics. He has achieved systematic and innovative results in granite classification, regional geological processes, and mechanisms of continental crustal growth. He has organized studies of Chang'e lunar samples and the Tianwen-1 mission series, significantly advancing the establishment and development of planetary science in China. He has published over 400 papers, which have received more than 80,000 citations. He was elected a Fellow of the Geological Society of America in 2012, and a Fellow of both the Geochemical Society and the European Association of Geochemistry in 2018. He received the TWAS Prize in Earth Sciences in 2011, the State Natural Science Award (Second Class) twice (in 2011 and 2019), and was elected an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2015.
Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry, CAS
Yi-Gang Xu
TITLE: New findings from Chang'e-6 Samples
BIOGRAPHY: Prof. Yi-Gang Xu is a research professor at the Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences (GIGCAS). After his graduation from University of Paris 7 and Postdoctoral Research at the Royal Holloway University of London, Prof. Xu joined GIGCAS in 1996 and is now the Group Leader of Deep Earth Exploration and Simulation. Prof. Xu is an expert on igneous petrology and geochemistry, and made contributions to mantle dynamics and magma genesis, in particular on the destruction of North China Craton, formation and evolution of Emeishan and Tarim large igneous provinces, nature and dynamics of the Big Mantle wedge in east Asia. Recently, Prof. Xu leads a young team at GIGCAS analyzing Chang’e-mission returned samples with focus on the genesis of young volcanism on Moon and the lunar evolution. Prof. Xu is the director of Lunar Sample Expert Committee, and an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Brown University
James W. Head
TITLE: Young Volcanism on the Moon
BIOGRAPHY: Prof. James W. Head is the Louis and Elizabeth Scherck Distinguished Professor (Research) in the Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences at Brown University. He was first employed in NASA’s Apollo Lunar Exploration Program (landing sites selection, Astronaut training, mission planning/operations, and in analyzing returned samples). His research centers on the study of geological processes that form and modify surfaces/crusts/lithospheres of Earth and other planetary bodies, how these processes vary with time, and how such processes interact to produce their historical geological records. His research focuses on volcanism, tectonism and glaciation, with field studies on active volcanoes (Hawaii/Mount St. Helens), seafloor volcanoes (two deep-sea submersible dives), and five field seasons in Antarctica, one in the Arctic. He has been involved in over twenty NASA and international space missions, and is currently engaged in missions to Mercury, Venus, Moon and Mars. He involves his students in all international projects, missions and meetings.
Tohoku University/University of Maryland
William McDonough
TITLE: Laser Ablation Sampling with Low-Power Plasma: A LA-MIP-MS Instrument for Spaceflight
BIOGRAPHY: William F. McDonough is a research professor at Tohoku University and emeritus professor at the University of Maryland. He uses chemistry and physics to study the Earth and terrestrial planets to reveal their composition and the processes involved in their formation and evolution. His expertise includes analytical instrumentation development and applications, and neutrino geophysics, detecting and interpreting the Earth’s geoneutrino (electron antineutrino) flux. Together with his students, he has produced chemical and isotopic data that constrain geological and cosmochemical processes. Using laser ablation systems and plasma mass spectrometers for the analyses of samples, he and his team have documented the timing and processes involved in the various differentiation processes that have led to the formation of the core, mantle, and crusts of the terrestrial planets. He is excited about the prospect of future missions conducting chemical and isotopic analyses on the Moon and Mars with the instrument that he and his team are currently developing and testing at NASA.
The Open University, UK
Mahesh Anand
TITLE: Volatiles on the Moon
BIOGRAPHY: Mahesh Anand is a Professor of Planetary Science and Exploration and Director of Research at School of Physical Sciences, The Open University. Prof. Anand’s research focusses on understanding the formation/evolution of planetary bodies in the Solar System through analysis of samples from the Earth, Moon, Mars and asteroids. His recent research on Apollo samples on the topic of “Water in the Moon” has seen training and mentoring of PhD students and postdocs, many of whom have secured academic positions at prestigious universities around the world. Prof. Anand is also a member of multiple international consortia on research topics involving “Origin and evolution of volatiles in the inner Solar System”. Prof. Anand chairs the UK-node for the NASA Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI) and is the investigation-lead for light element volatiles of ESA’s PROSPECT payload to be launched on a NASA CLPS mission to the Moon in 2027.
Nanjing University
Alexander Nemchin
TITLE: U-Pb isotope systems in lunar samples
BIOGRAPHY: Prof. Alexander Nemchin graduated from St Petersburg State University in 1984 and worked at the Precambrian Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences. He completed his PhD at Curtin University in Perth, Western Australia, in 1996, studying Precambrian rocks of the Yilgarn Craton. He continued working at the university as a professor, investigating the geochemistry and isotope systematics of the oldest terrestrial rocks and minerals. This work led to the increasing inclusion of studies of extraterrestrial samples into his research, focusing on the chemistry and chronology of lunar and martian samples. Since June 2025, he is working as a professor at Nanjing University.
Macau University of Science and Technology
Menghua Zhu
TITLE: Early Bombardments of the Moon
BIOGRAPHY: Prof. Meng-Hua Zhu is a Professor at the Space Science Institute, State Key Laboratory of Lunar and Planetary Sciences, Macau University of Science and Technology. Prof. Zhu obtained his PhD degree in Computer Science from Macau University of Science and Technology in 2010. Prof. Zhu’s research includes: 1) impact effects in the Solar System from observations, numerical simulations, and laboratory impact experiments; 2) late accretion history of terrestrial planets; 3) lunar and planetary remote sensing observation (x/gamma-ray, neutron, hyper-spectroscopy). As a participant scientist, Prof. Zhu fully joined the China’s Chang’E missions to the Moon and Tianwen-1 mission to Mars. Asteroid 6283 1980VX1 is named as Menghuazhu.
Institute of Geochemistry, CAS
Yang Li
TITLE: Redox Processes on the Lunar Surface and Key Mineralogical Evidence
BIOGRAPHY: Prof. Yang Li is a professor from Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences. He is the executive deputy director of the Center for Lunar and Planetary Sciences, and an advanced worker of Guizhou Province. Prof. Li serves as a member of the Scientific Research Expert Committee for the Chang'e-7 mission, a member of the Expert Committee for Scientific Research and Application Systems of the Manned Lunar Exploration Program, and a member of the National Technical Committee for Standardization. Dedicated to the study of the formation and spatiotemporal evolution of planetary regolith, Prof. Li has made significant breakthroughs in the analysis of returned lunar samples, particularly in the field of multi-scale redox processes on the lunar surface. He has published over 70 SCI-indexed academic papers, including more than 40 as first author or corresponding author in high-impact journals such as Nature Communications (3), Science Advances (3), and Nature Astronomy (1).
We welcome lunar scientists globally to attend this International Lunar Sample Research Symposium and to celebrate the recent discoveries relating to lunar samples!
来源:中科院地质地球所