Moon - astronomy.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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B Volcanic Features
Maria, domes, rilles, and a few craters display indisputable characteristics of volcanic origin.
Maria are plains of dark-colored rock that cover approximately 40 percent ofthe Moon's visible hemisphere.
The maria formed when molten rock erupted onto the surface and solidified between 3.16 billion and 3.96 billion years ago.
This rockresembles terrestrial basalt, a volcanic rock type widely distributed on Earth, but the rock that formed the maria has a higher iron content and contains unusually largeamounts of titanium.
The largest of the maria is Oceanus Procellarum, an oval-shaped plain on the near side of the Moon 2,500 km by 1,500 km wide.
Photographs of the side of the Moon not visible from Earth have revealed a startling fact: The far side generally lacks the maria that are so conspicuous a feature of thevisible side.
This probably reflects the fact that the Moon’s crust is thicker on the far side than on the near side, and therefore the lavas that form the maria were moreeasily erupted through the thinner crust of the near side.
Rilles are of two basic types: sinuous and straight.
Sinuous rilles are meandering channels that are probably lava drainage channels or collapsed lava tubes formed bylarge lava flows.
Straight rilles are large shallow troughs caused by movement of the Moon’s crust; they may be up to a thousand kilometers long and several kilometerswide.
Domes are small rounded features that range from 8 to 16 km (5 to 10 mi) in diameter and from 60 to 90 m (200 to 300 ft) in height.
Domes, thought to be smallinactive volcanoes, often contain a small rimless pit on their tops.
Magnetic and other measurements indicate a current temperature at the Moon’s core as high as 1600°C (2900°F), above the melting point of most lunar rocks.Evidence from seismic recordings suggests that some regions near the lunar center may be liquid.
However, no recent eruptions of liquid rock have been observed andthe Moon evidently has had no volcanic activity on its surface over the last 1 billion years.
At most, trapped gas from deep in the Moon may still reach the surface insome places.
Astronomers reported possible evidence of “out-gassing” on the surface of the Moon in the last 1 to 10 million years in a paper published in 2006.
The unusually brightsoil around a feature 3 km (2 mi) wide on the Moon’s equator indicates some process has turned over fresh regolith that has not had enough time to be “weathered” bysolar wind and micrometeorites.
Called Ina, the feature was first photographed from Apollo spacecraft orbiting the Moon in the 1970s, and was later examined by theClementine probe.
Gases from inside the Moon may have erupted on the surface, lifting and exposing fresh lunar soil.
Scientists do not know the exact source andnature of the gases.
At least three other lunar features that look similar to Ina have been identified.
They may have been formed by bursts of gas, as well.
C Ice
Temperatures on most of the Moon’s surface are too extreme for water or ice to exist, ranging from a maximum of 127°C (261°F) at lunar noon to a minimum of -173°C (-279°F) just before lunar dawn.
Temperatures in permanently shadowed areas near the lunar poles, however, may consistently be as low as -220°C (-364°F).Comets and micrometeoroids that strike the Moon release gases that contain water.
The gases would form an extremely thin atmosphere that would then migrate to thecoldest regions of the poles and condense out, forming ice that combines with the lunar soil.
In 1996 a team working with data gathered by the Clementine spacecraftannounced that frozen water may exist in one of these shadowed areas near the Moon’s south pole.
Clementine was a joint venture by the Department of Defense andthe National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
The spacecraft’s radar showed what may be an 8,000 sq km (3,000 sq mi) area covered with a mixture ofdirt and ice crystals.
Clementine was launched in 1994 and gathered data for four months.
NASA launched the Lunar Prospector spacecraft toward the Moon in 1998.
Prospector returned data that appeared to confirm the Clementine discovery and suggestedthat a significant amount of water exists in the dark areas near the lunar poles in the form of ice crystals mixed with soil.
The evidence was indirect, however, andconsisted of finding elevated levels of hydrogen, a component of water, around the poles.
Estimates of the possible amount of water on the Moon varied widely, from 10million to 6 billion metric tons.
In 1999, at the end of the Lunar Prospector’s mission, scientists programmed the spacecraft to crash at a specific spot likely to contain water, hoping that the debristhat rose with the impact would contain detectable water vapor.
Although no water was detected after the crash, scientists could not conclude that no water existed onthe Moon.
They acknowledged several other possible explanations for the result: The spacecraft might have missed its target area, the telescopes used to observe thecrash might have been aimed incorrectly, or the magnitude of the impact created by the Lunar Prospector spacecraft may have been insufficient to generate a largecloud of water vapor.
In 2003 researchers used the giant Arecibo Observatory radio telescope to bounce radar signals off the surface of craters at the Moon’s poles.
The returned radar signalindicated that large, thick layers of ice were not present.
The findings failed to rule out the existence of smaller amounts of ice at the lunar poles preserved in thin layersor as scattered ice crystals mixed with dust.
The Arecibo Observatory conducted a higher resolution radar study of the lunar south pole in 2006 and found that similarradar signals came from both sunlit and shaded areas.
The issue of ice at the lunar poles was not resolved, however.
NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO),scheduled for launch in 2008, will carry a special satellite called LCROSS (Lunar CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite) that will look for evidence of water in thedebris plume when the LRO’s booster stage crashes into Shackleton Crater at the south pole.
IV ORIGIN OF THE MOON
Measuring the ages of lunar rocks has revealed that the Moon is about 4.6 billion years old, or about the same age as Earth and probably the rest of the solar system.Before the modern age of space exploration, scientists had three major models for the origin of the Moon.
The fission from Earth model proposed that the young,molten Earth rotated so fast that it flung off some material that became the Moon.
The formation in Earth orbit model claimed that the Moon formed independently, butclose enough to Earth to orbit the planet.
The formation far from Earth model proposed that the Moon formed independently in orbit around the Sun but wassubsequently captured by Earth’s gravity when it passed close to the planet.
None of these three models, however, is entirely consistent with current knowledge of theMoon.
In 1975, having studied Moon rocks and close-up pictures of the Moon, scientists proposed what has come to be regarded as the most probable of the theories offormation: a giant, planetary impact.
The giant impact model proposes that early in Earth’s history, well over 4 billion years ago, Earth was struck by a large planet-sized body sometimes referred to asTheia.
Early estimates for the size of this object were comparable to the size of Mars, but other research suggests that the object may have been more massive andthat it struck Earth at a glancing angle.
The catastrophic impact blasted portions of Earth and the impacting body into Earth’s orbit, where debris from the impacteventually coalesced to form the Moon.
After years of research on lunar rocks during the 1970s and 1980s, this model became the most widely accepted one for theMoon’s origin.
The giant impact model seems to account for most of the available evidence: the similarity in composition between Earth and Moon indicated by analysis of lunarsamples, the near-complete global melting of the Moon (and possibly Earth) in the distant past, and the simple fact that the other models are all inadequate to onedegree or another.
Research continues on the ramifications of such a violent lunar origin to the early history of Earth and the other planets..
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