The Origin of the Moon
''The evolution of the world can be compared to a display of fireworks that
has just ended; some few red wisps, ashes and smoke. Standing on a cooled
cinder, we see the slow fading of the suns, and we try to recall the vanishing
brilliance of the origin of the worlds.''
-- Georges Lemaitre
Begin with the origin of the solar system:
- The solar nebula was a giant ball of gas and dust
- Over the eons, the inexorable force of gravity collapsed it in size
- The Sun formed as an immense central bulge
- The planets, satellites, asteroids and comets formed from the debris (why didn't they fall into the Sun?)
Consider what we learned from the manned
missions to the Moon:
- The Moon is ancient, but not primordial
- Around 4.5 billion years ago, the Moon was so hot that the surface melted, forming a magma ocean
- The Earth and the Moon show evidence of a common ancestry
- The Moon lacks iron and volatile elements (which would form water, and atmospheric gases)
- The oldest rocks on Earth are as old as the youngest rocks found on the Moon
Is the Moon ...
- A sister planet
to the Earth?
(formed from similar raw materials in the early solar system nebula)
- A captured asteroid?
(requiring a near-perfect alignment of orbital trajectories and velocities at approach)
- A spun-off fragment?
(perhaps a chunk of mantle from the Pacific Ocean basin)
- A relic
of a near-catastrophic collision?
(heated by the force of impact)
What are the key pieces of data, and how well do our four hypotheses explain them?
- Similarities to Earth:
- The Earth and the Moon have the same fractional amounts of various oxygen isotopes,
suggesting that they formed from materials found at a similar orbital radius (the
same distance from the Sun)
- Differences from Earth:
- The Moon has a significantly lower overall density than the Earth
(3.3 versus 5.5 grams per cubic centimeter), too low for the Moon
to contain a heavy iron core
- Surface samples contain fewer volatile elements, suggesting that they were baked out
(or evaporated under heat, akin to heating a towel in the clothes dryer to remove water)
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Images of the Earth and Moon, and astronaut Buzz Aldrin's footprint in the lunar dust. [NASA]
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