• About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Login
Newsletter
NRI Affairs
Youtube Channel
  • News
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Visa
  • Student Hub
  • Business
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Other
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Visa
  • Student Hub
  • Business
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Other
No Result
View All Result
NRI Affairs
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

The Moon was once covered by an ocean of molten rock, data from India’s space mission suggests

The location where Vikram touched down was further south than any other landing craft had previously been on the Moon. It gave scientists an insight into geology of the Moon that had not yet been sampled.

Guest Author by Guest Author
August 26, 2024
in Opinion
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
0
The Moon was once covered by an ocean of molten rock, data from India’s space mission suggests

The similarity in composition of new and old lunar samples suggests a magma ocean covered the Moon early in its history. Nasa (Image: Goddard Space Flight Center)

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Advertisements

Joshua Snape, University of Manchester

Data from India’s recent Chandrayaan-3 mission supports the idea that an ocean of molten rock once covered the Moon. Scientists from the mission have published their new findings in the journal Nature.

On August 23 2023, a lander called Vikram successfully touched down on the lunar surface. Controllers then deployed a rover called Pragyan, which had been stowed on Vikram, to explore the landing site.

The location where Vikram touched down was further south than any other landing craft had previously been on the Moon. It gave scientists an insight into geology of the Moon that had not yet been sampled.

Pragyan’s measurements found that the particular mix of chemical elements in the lunar soil (or regolith) surrounding the lander was relatively uniform. This regolith was primarily made up of a white rock type called ferroan anorthosite.

The scientists say the chemical composition of the lunar south pole regolith is intermediate between those of samples from two locations in the Moon’s equatorial region: those collected by astronauts on the US Apollo 16 flight in 1972, and those returned to Earth by the robotic Luna-20 mission, flown by the Soviet Union the same year.

The broad similarity in the chemical compositions of all these samples, despite the fact they came from very distant geographical locations on the Moon, supports the idea that a single magma ocean covered the Moon early in its history.

Moon
Measurements taken by Pragyan resemble those of samples from the US Apollo 16 mission. Nasa

The Moon is thought to have formed when a Mars-sized planet collided with Earth, ejecting rock that subsequently coalesced to form our planet’s only satellite. The lunar magma ocean is thought to have been present from its formation to tens or hundreds of millions of years afterwards.

The cooling and crystallisation of this magma ocean eventually led to the ferroan anorthosite rocks that make up the Moon’s crust.

Orbital measurements

Geologically, the lunar highlands are thought to partially represent the ancient lunar crust. Chandrayaan-3, Apollo 16 and Luna 20 all landed in highland regions, allowing comparisons. As such, it presented an opportunity to test predictions of the theory that the Moon was covered in a global ocean of liquid rock – known as the lunar magma ocean (LMO) model.

The authors highlight how their measurements show the uniformity in the composition of the Moon’s surface over several tens of metres where the rover was operating.

“Ground-truth” measurements such as these are crucial for interpreting observations made by orbiting spacecraft. For example, the authors compared these results with data from two previous Indian lunar missions, Chandrayaan-1 and -2, which both measured the lunar surface from orbit.

The consistency between these earlier spacecraft measurements and those made by the Pragyan rover gives new confidence to the orbital datasets. The orbital data suggests the lunar surface in this region is uniform in its chemical composition over an area of several kilometres.

There are many differences between the Moon's nearside (left) and farside (right).
There are many differences between the Moon’s nearside (left) and farside (right). Nasa/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio

These measurements are also invaluable when it comes to interpreting lunar meteorites. These are samples of rock ejected into space from the lunar surface when a space rock collides with the Moon.

Advertisements

These rock fragments may later enter the Earth’s atmosphere, and some even hit the ground. These represent fantastic samples, as the random nature in which they are thrown from different parts of the Moon means we receive samples from areas not visited by previous missions.

However, precisely because of this random mode of sampling, it is difficult to know where on the Moon they have come from, preventing us from placing them in their proper context. So, the Pragyan rover measurements help us build a picture of what different regions of the Moon look like, and how our meteorite samples compare.

Nearside and farside

The lunar magma ocean model was first conceived following the return of samples from the Apollo 11 mission. That mission landed in an area dominated by dark basaltic rock (think of the stuff produced by volcanoes in Iceland or Hawaii). However, researchers at the time noticed the Apollo 11 soils also contained fragments of white rock, rich in the mineral anorthite, which was given the name ferroan anorthosite.

This observation led to the suggestion that the white rock represented tiny fragments of the original, ancient lunar crust. As the magma ocean cooled, denser minerals such as olivine and pyroxene sank to form a deeper layer called the mantle, while the ferroan anorthosite – being less dense than the surrounding magma – floated to form the Moon’s first crust.

Animation showing the evolution of the Moon.

Since the original lunar magma ocean models were proposed, various suggestions have been made to explain additional complexities about lunar samples and geological observations of the Moon more generally – for example, the fact that the lunar nearside crust appears to be much thinner than that of the farside.

Equally, it is unclear exactly why the nearside has experienced so much more volcanic activity, resulting in it being dominated by vast plains of dark basaltic rock, while the farside appears to comprise more of ferroan anorthosite.

In trying to address these problems, researchers have developed detailed models to explain how the lunar crust formed and was later modified by volcanic eruptions and impact cratering. Some models have predicted multiple layers to the lunar crust, with the ferroan anorthosite rocks at the top and more magnesium-rich rocks underneath.

Interestingly, the composition measured in this study is not what would be expected of the pristine ferroan anorthosite thought to have comprised the ancient lunar crusts. Instead, it contains more magnesium.

This observation indicates a higher concentration of certain minerals in the lunar crust than was suggested by the original lunar magma ocean models. The authors suggest their measurements may represent a mixed composition of the ferroan anorthosite rock that makes up the ancient lunar crust, together with material from the underlying layers of more magnesium-rich rocks.

These different layers of material would have been mixed by the excavation of material during impact cratering on the Moon. In particular, the Chandrayaan-3 landing site would probably have been covered by about 1.5-2km of ejected rock from the so-called “South Pole-Aitken” impact basin – a 2,500km diameter depression in the surface that is thought to have been created by a colossal impact event early in the Moon’s history.

Later impact cratering events would have further mixed and distributed this material, resulting in the kind of chemical signature measured by the Chandrayaan-3 mission in this study.

Joshua Snape, Royal Society University Research Fellow, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Manchester

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

?s=32&d=mystery&r=g&forcedefault=1
Guest Author

Guest Author

Guest Author

Related Posts

Israel’s Final Solution for Gaza
Opinion

Israel’s Final Solution for Gaza

May 20, 2025
India and Pakistan have agreed a precarious peace – but will it last?
Opinion

India and Pakistan have agreed a precarious peace – but will it last?

May 19, 2025
It’s almost winter. Why is Australia still so hot?
Opinion

It’s almost winter. Why is Australia still so hot?

May 10, 2025
Next Post
Janmashtami in Gaza, the world’s largest open air prison

Janmashtami in Gaza, the world’s largest open air prison

Visa Applications-in-India-Surge-Beyond-Pre-Pandemic-Levels-in-the-First-Half-of-2024-nri-affairs

Visa Applications in India Surge Beyond Pre-Pandemic Levels in the First Half of 2024

Field of dreams? How some professional cricketers continue to pay the price for sporting excellence

Field of dreams? How some professional cricketers continue to pay the price for sporting excellence

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Bollywood car sydney

Australia’s only Indian-style taxi needs help to stay alive

3 years ago
Vigil4

Sydney expresses solidarity with COVID-stricken India

4 years ago
14 Indian-American Charged in $53 Million Fraud Case

Around Dozen Indian-Americans Charged in $53 Million Fraud Case

2 years ago
UK may offer cheaper, easier visas in return for trade deal with India

UK may offer cheaper, easier visas in return for trade deal with India

3 years ago

Categories

  • Business
  • Events
  • Literature
  • Multimedia
  • News
  • nriaffairs
  • Opinion
  • Other
  • People
  • Student Hub
  • Top Stories
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • Visa

Topics

Air India Australia california Canada caste china COVID-19 cricket Europe Gaza Germany Green Card h1b visa Hindu immigration India india-australia Indian Indian-American Indian-origin indian diaspora indian origin indian student Indian Students Khalistan London Modi Narendra Modi New Zealand NRI NSW Pakistan Palestine Singapore student students travel trump UAE uk US USA us visa Victoria visa
NRI Affairs

© 2025 NRI Affairs.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Visa
  • Student Hub
  • Business
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Other

© 2025 NRI Affairs.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
WP Twitter Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com