homescience NewsChandrayaan 1 data shows electrons from Earth forming water on Moon | What led to the discovery

Chandrayaan-1 data shows electrons from Earth forming water on Moon | What led to the discovery

The new finding may help to explain the origin of the water ice previously discovered in the permanently shaded regions of the Moon.

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By CNBCTV18.com Sept 15, 2023 2:51:10 PM IST (Updated)

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Chandrayaan-1 data shows electrons from Earth forming water on Moon | What led to the discovery
A team of scientists analysing the remote sensing data from India's Chandrayaan-1 lunar mission found that high-energy electrons from the Earth may be forming water on the Moon. The findings were published in the journal Nature Astronomy.

Researchers from the University of Hawaii (UH) in the US discovered that the electrons in "Earth's plasma sheet" are contributing to weathering processes" — breaking down or dissolving of rocks and minerals — on the Moon's surface, news agency PTI reported. The study said these electrons may have aided the formation of water on the lunar body.
Now, solar wind, which is composed of high energy particles such as protons, bombards the lunar surface and is thought to be one of the primary ways in which water has been formed on the Moon.
"We suggest that although we have confirmed the importance of the solar wind as a major source of fast water production on the Moon, hitherto unobserved properties of the plasma sheet properties may also play an important role," the abstract from the study read.
Why the study of water on the Moon is important?
The researchers said that knowing the concentrations and distributions of water on the Moon is critical to understanding its formation and evolution, and to providing water resources for future human exploration.
How do the new findings help?
The new finding may help to explain the origin of the water ice previously discovered in the permanently shaded regions of the Moon.
Chandrayaan-1, the first Indian lunar probe under the Chandrayaan programme, played a crucial role in the discovery of water molecules on the Moon. It was launched in 2008.
What led to the new finding?
The team analysed the changes in surface weathering as the Moon passes through Earth's magnetotail. The magnetotail is an area that almost completely shields the lunar body from the solar wind but not the Sun's light photons.
"This provides a natural laboratory for studying the formation processes of lunar surface water," Shuai Li, an assistant researcher at the UH Manoa School of Ocean, was quoted as saying.
Li explained further that when the Moon is outside of the magnetotail, the lunar surface is bombarded with solar wind. "Inside the magnetotail, there are almost no solar wind protons and water formation was expected to drop to nearly zero," the researcher added.
Li and co-authors then analysed the remote sensing data that were collected by the Moon Mineralogy Mapper instrument, an imaging spectrometer, onboard India's Chandrayaan 1 mission between 2008 and 2009.
They, specifically, assessed the changes in water formation as the Moon traversed through Earth's magnetotail, which includes the plasma sheet.
"To my surprise, the remote sensing observations showed that the water formation in Earth's magnetotail is almost identical to the time when the Moon was outside of the Earth's magnetotail," said Li.
Now, this indicates that in the magnetotail, "there may be additional formation processes or new sources of water not directly associated with the implantation of solar wind protons. In particular, radiation by high energy electrons exhibits similar effects as the solar wind protons," he explained.
The researchers added that this finding and the team's previous study of rusty lunar poles indicate that the Earth is strongly tied with its Moon in many unrecognised aspects.
Chandrayaan 1 was launched by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) in October 2008, and operated until August 2009. The mission included an orbiter and an impactor.
India successfully landed Chandrayaan-3 mission, with a rover and a lander, near the Moon's enigmatic south pole last month, becoming the first country to do so.
(With inputs from PTI)

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