时间:2025-07-12 14:38:37 来源:网络整理编辑:綜合
The first words uttered by a human standing on the moon are iconic. But so are the words from the se
The first words uttered by a human standing on the moon are iconic. But so are the words from the second brazen astronaut.
"Beautiful, beautiful. Magnificent desolation," marveled NASA astronaut Buzz Aldrin.
Indeed, the moon's powdery surface is a harsh, airless, inhospitable place, a world that reaches 250 degrees Fahrenheit (121 Celsius) and drops to -208 F (-133 C) at the equator — though NASA has recorded temperatures of -410 F (-246 C) in the permanently shadowed lunar craters.
But the desolate moon holds surprises and still undiscovered secrets. Below you'll find curiosities about the moon's past, present, and future.
SEE ALSO:NASA’s most unusual astronaut has diedOur natural satellite is on average some 238,855 miles away from Earth. But it's gradually departing.
"The Moon is slowly moving away from Earth, getting about an inch farther away each year," NASA explains.
Energy from the spinning Earth is transferred to the moon, ultimately pushing it farther out. This gradual separation will continue for billions of years. Meaning the moon will one day be 100,000 or so miles farther away in some 5 billion years, when our sun expands and dies.
The moon still shakes and rattles.
This world experiences seismic activity, aka "moonquakes," the first of which were recorded by seismometers left on the lunar surface by Apollo astronauts. The instruments recorded over 13,000 quakes, and not all the temblors were small.
"Some of these quakes can be fairly strong, around five on the Richter scale," Thomas Watters, senior scientist in the Center for Earth and Planetary Studies at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum, said in a statement.
Planetary scientists suspect that the shrinking moon, under a third the width of Earth, is triggering these quakes. "Just as a grape wrinkles as it shrinks down to a raisin, the Moon gets wrinkles as it shrinks," NASA explains. "Unlike the flexible skin on a grape, the Moon’s surface crust is brittle, so it breaks as the Moon shrinks, forming 'thrust faults' where one section of crust is pushed up over a neighboring part."
When NASA journeyed to the moon, the space agency found that lunar dust was a major problem. It "clogged mechanisms, interfered with instruments, caused radiators to overheat, and even tore up their spacesuits," NASA explained. And if inhaled, lunar dust could damage lungs.
"The dust is very fine, abrasive and sharp, like tiny pieces of glass, making it more of a dangerous threat than just a simple nuisance," Sharon Miller, a NASA research engineer, said in a statement.
That's because, unlike on Earth, soil and rocks on the lunar surface aren't smoothed down and eroded by water and wind. So it's a damaging environment. As NASA prepares to return astronauts to the moon (the Artemis program), the agency seeks to mitigate dust damage to its rovers, spacesuits, power systems, and beyond.
"Dust is going to be the environmental problem for future missions, both inside and outside habitats," said Harrison “Jack” Schmitt, a geologist and Apollo 17 astronaut.
The moon is both a museum and a dump. Human explorers have left a variety of objects, often out of necessity. Here are some examples.
- Human waste:There are 96 bags of poop on the moon.
- Human ashes: NASA's Lunar Prospector probe carried astronautEugene M. Shoemaker's ashes to the moon in a protected capsule in 1999. "We will always know when we look at the moon, that Gene is there," said Carolyn Shoemaker, an astronomer and wife of Eugene Shoemaker.
- Golf balls: It's not fiction. Astronaut Alan Shepard really brought a couple of golf balls to the moon, and launched them across the lunar surface.
- Hammer-Feather Drop: Live on TV in 1971, Apollo 15 Commander David Scott dropped a feather and hammer at the same time. "Because they were essentially in a vacuum, there was no air resistance and the feather fell at the same rate as the hammer, as Galileo had concluded hundreds of years before — all objects released together fall at the same rate regardless of mass," NASA explained.
The moon's surface is notoriously harsh. It reaches up to 260 Fahrenheit (127 C) in daytime and plummets down to -280 F (-173 C) in the lunar night.
Yet NASA has identified pits on the surface that "hover around a comfortable 63 F (about 17 C)." The space agency's moon satellite, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter(LRO), captured environmental data about these pits, some of which are collapsed lava tubes (created long ago when lava oozed under the lunar surface).
"Lunar pits are a fascinating feature on the lunar surface," LRO Project Scientist Noah Petro said in a statement. "Knowing that they create a stable thermal environment helps us paint a picture of these unique lunar features and the prospect of one day exploring them."
These pits don't simply provide pleasant temperatures. "The pits or caves would also offer some protection from cosmic rays, solar radiation and micrometeorites," NASA explained.
There are two giant masses of rocky material inside Earth, made of different elements than the rest of Earth's interior. Scientists think these masses came from a violent collision — the same one that created the moon.
Geologists suspect that an object dubbed "Theia," which at the time was a smaller planet, collided with early Earth. Earth absorbed much of Theia, and the rest amassed into what is now the moon.
"It appears that Earth's blobs are remnants of a planetary collision that formed our moon," Ed Garnero, a professor at Arizona State University's School of Earth and Space Exploration, said in a statement. "In other words, the massive blobs currently inside Earth, deep beneath our feet, are extraterrestrial. Earth not only has 'blobs,' Earth has extraterrestrial blobs!"
This story has been updated with more facts about the moon.
TopicsNASA
Is Samsung's Galaxy Note7 really the best phone?2025-07-12 14:17
【波盈足球】 世足C羅明年確定加盟沙烏地聯賽 身價曝光達161億 ( 納斯,葡萄牙 )2025-07-12 13:56
內馬爾複出點射破門 巴西4:1擊敗韓國晉級八強(巴西和韓國誰比較強)2025-07-12 13:38
阿根廷難贏荷蘭?黑馬終結C羅?世界杯四強預測來了!(世界杯決賽阿根廷對荷蘭)2025-07-12 13:30
J.K. Rowling makes 'Harry Potter' joke about Olympics event2025-07-12 13:14
【波盈足球】 姆巴佩世界盃進9球追平梅西 有望挑戰最多進球紀錄 ( 世界,進球 )2025-07-12 12:51
【波盈足球】 又一位神人 ?世足賽前預測摩洛哥進決賽 連淘汰賽對手都神準命中 ( 摩洛哥,喀麥隆 )2025-07-12 12:39
卡塔爾世界杯|小將拉莫斯“帽子戲法” 葡萄牙6:1大勝瑞士晉級八強(衛冕冠軍葡萄牙止步16強)2025-07-12 12:38
The Weeknd teases new music in Instagram post2025-07-12 12:06
法國英格蘭會師8強,姆巴佩5球領跑射手榜,日韓即將登場(英格蘭3:2阿根廷陣容)2025-07-12 11:57
We asked linguists if Donald Trump speaks like that on purpose2025-07-12 14:23
【波盈足球】 世足英格蘭前鋒史特林住家遇襲 急返英國「歸期未定」 ( 英格蘭,米爾 )2025-07-12 13:52
【波盈足球】 世足英格蘭挺同性戀才輸球?肯恩遭國內保守派嘲笑 ( 英格蘭,臂章 )2025-07-12 13:48
【波盈足球】 世足門將撲救3球 克羅埃西亞PK大戰3比1勝出 ( 西亞,克羅 )2025-07-12 13:37
Is Samsung's Galaxy Note7 really the best phone?2025-07-12 13:19
2022 年卡塔爾世界杯 1/8 決賽葡萄牙 6:1 大勝瑞士晉級 ,如何評價本場比賽 ?(歐洲杯進16強的球隊)2025-07-12 13:14
世界杯八強確定2席!阿根廷22025-07-12 13:09
西班牙點球大戰遭淘汰 葡萄牙大勝瑞士晉級(葡萄牙進8強了嗎)2025-07-12 13:04
Australian football makes history with first LGBT Pride Game2025-07-12 13:00
競猜世界杯僅剩最後8場比賽(世界杯多少場)2025-07-12 11:54