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Green glass spherules collected from the
Apollo 15 landing site at Hadley Rille on the moon are shown in this
undated handout photo. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING,
July 10 (Xinhuanet) -- U.S. researchers have found water in rocks from the
moon -- prompting new questions about its origin, said a study published in
Thursday's British weekly journal Nature.
The discovery was made by analysing small glass beads
from lunar sand scooped up by Apollo mission astronauts nearly 40 years ago.
They used a new method of analyzing elements in the lunar sand samples to show
strong evidence of water, dating back 3 billion years.
The standard "giant impact" theory for the formation
of the moon assumes that a huge body crashed into the early Earth, sending
massive amounts of molten magma into orbit. This disc of magma gradually
coalesced and cooled into the moon as it is today.
But since the moon is too small to maintain an
atmosphere, any volatile gases or liquids, such as water, were thought to have
bubbled away and escaped into space.
Now a team at Brown University, Rhode Island, has
thrown this theory into doubt by finding water in the titanium glass beads that
are scattered all over the lunar surface. These are the result of huge lunar
volcanic eruptions that occurred billions of years ago.
Importantly, the beads are made from material that
originates from deep within the moon -- avoiding any chance that the water could
have come from external sources such as comets hitting the surface.
Using high precision secondary ion mass spectrometry
(SIMS), the team was surprised to discover that the beads contain around 45
parts per million of water.
By modelling the dynamics of the volcanic eruption
and rate of cooling, researchers calculated that approximately 95 percent of any
water would have been lost during volcanic activity that brought the beads to
the surface.
This leads to an estimate that lava deep within the
moon contains water at up to 745 parts per million -- similar to that in Earth's
upper mantle.
"Our model is not perfect - so although we know there
is water there, we cannot be sure exactly how much," said Alberto Saal, lead
author on the research. Even so, Saal added, the presence of water should
definitely be considered in future models of the moon's formation.
"This is a surprising and important result," said
David Stevenson, an expert on the evolution of planets at the California
Institute of Technology. "Water lowers the melting point of rocks, so it could
change the evolution of a body such as the moon."
"But one important thing to note is that the moon is
probably heterogeneous," Stevenson added. "It is possible that during a giant
impact some areas of water could have become trapped. The discovery of water in
one place doesn't necessarily mean the rest of the moon is the same."
(Agencies)