Search

A New Study Shows The Moon's Interior Could Contain Water

The moon is pictured in this image from December 6, 2006. A new study shows the moon's interior might contain water. Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Imageshide caption

toggle caption
Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images

The moon might be flowing with much more water than we thought, thanks to ancient volcanic deposits, a new study shows.

Using satellite data, scientists from Brown University studied layers of rock on the moon that likely formed from large volcanic eruptions, called lunar pyroclastic deposits. The magma created by these eruptions has been carried to the moon's surface from very deep within its interior, the study showed.

But water on the moon isn't new – in fact, it's had a pretty bonkers past.

For a long time, scientists thought that the moon was dry, because of how it was formed. According to the "giant impact" theory, the moon was born 4.5 billion years ago when an object rammed into the Earth. The new moon was an ocean of magma, and researchers thought there was no way a moon that hot could have retained water.

Then the Apollo astronauts brought back samples from the moon, including little glass beads. They did contain trace amounts of water, but for a while it was assumed to be water from Earth that had gotten mixed in by accident.

0 Response to "A New Study Shows The Moon's Interior Could Contain Water"

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.