THE moon was once covered in a sea of boiling lava, experts say – and they have uncovered new evidence that lends itself to another theory.
In addition to boasting a “magma ocean,” the Moon was likely formed after an ancient planet smashed into Earth.
Soil samples from the lunar south pole indicate the Moon was once covered in a boiling “magma ocean” that cooled into a white rock called ferroan anorthosite[/caption]The new evidence comes courtesy of Pragyan, a rover sent to comb the Moon’s surface as part of India’s Chandrayaan-3 mission last summer.
The rover was deployed further south than any others before it. Pragyan has since been traveling across the south pole to gather soil samples and collect information about the Moon’s atmosphere.
Thanks to the miraculous little rover, scientists have uncovered clues about the history of Earth’s closest natural satellite.
A paper published last week in Nature details the results of an analysis of soil sample data, which backs theories that the Moon’s surface was molten not long after its formation.
Scientists examined radiation data sent back from the rover’s alpha-particle X-ray spectrometer.
The rover transmitted information about the makeup of the moon’s regolith, a layer of loose rock and dust that rests atop bedrock.
All 23 samples were composed mostly of a white rock called ferroan anorthosite.
Sensor data from other projects has detected the same material in areas including the equator and mid-latitude zones. The researchers take this as evidence of a uniform layer of material covering the celestial body.
This also gives weight to theories that the moon’s entire surface was covered by bubbling magma soon after its formation.
The same theory proposes that the Moon was formed when a Mars-sized object slammed into the Earth, launching debris into space. The material came together to form the Moon.
As the impact would have generated a considerable amount, this would explain the so-called “magma ocean.”
The theory also explains why many moon rocks have a similar makeup to those on Earth.
Scientists believe the magma ocean existed for hundreds of millions of years but later cooled and crystallized, forming ferroan anorthosite.
The theory was devised after samples returned from the Apollo 11 mission in 1969.
Researchers believe the Moon was created from resulting debris after a Mars-sized object slammed into Earth[/caption]While the soil was mostly composed of dark basaltic rock – similar to the material produced by volcanoes on Earth – it also contained fragments of what was later dubbed ferroan anorthosite.
Researchers hypothesized that the white rock represented tiny fragments of the ancient crust.
As the magma cooled, denser minerals sank to form a deeper layer called the mantle. Ferroan anorthosite, being less dense, drifted to the top.
The molten sea could’ve covered the Moon for hundreds of millions of years before it crystallized[/caption]The composition measured in the latest study is not pure ferroan anorthosite. In fact, it contains more magnesium than expected.
The authors believe their measurements may represent a mixture of material from the ancient crust and the underlying rock layer.
These different layers would have churned together during impact cratering, as objects like asteroids and meteorites struck the Moon throughout its history.
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