时间:2024-11-24 12:16:09 来源:网络整理编辑:熱點
Scientists detected water on the moon, and for the first time they can say they literally found it w
Scientists detected water on the moon, and for the first time they can say they literally found it while on the lunar surface.
A Chinese lunar lander returned more than 60 ounces of soil and rock samples from its trip to the moon in December 2020. But before Chang’E-5 arrived back on Earth, the spacecraft used an onboard instrument to take measurements there on the spot. Based on the readings, scientists about 239,000 miles away on Earth knew it had likely encountered water.
Water is a rare resource in deep space. Given that it’s a vital, life-sustaining ingredient, the scarcity of it beyond Earth presents an obstacle for people to explore space. Scientists have been interested in whether the moon's tiny bit of water could be tapped for astronauts to use while away from the planet for a long time.
A research team, led by scientists at the Institute of Geology and Geophysics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, saw signs of water in the probe's data, identifying H2O molecules based on their distinct spectral reflectance, a measurement of how something reflects or absorbs the sun’s radiation. The study was published last week in Science Advances.
The Chang’E-5 detection shows there might be more water on the moon than expected, said Matt Siegler, senior scientist for the Planetary Science Institute, a nonprofit based in Tucson, Ariz.
“I'm sure there are a lot of American scientists who are jealous that we didn't have the lander on the moon to do this measurement,” said Siegler, who was not involved in the study. Siegler will be part of NASA’s Artemis team for its rover mission next year to drill for ice at the moon’s south pole.
SEE ALSO:Ice near the lunar north and south poles show a shift in the moon's axisPeople’s understanding of lunar water has increased in recent years. When the Apollo astronauts came home in 1969, they believed the moon was completely bone dry.
In the late 2000s, a number of missions, including the Indian Space Research Organization’s Chandrayaan-1, found signs of hydration on the sunlit surface but couldn’t definitively say whether it was H20, or hydroxyl, water’s close chemical relative. Casey Honniball, a NASA postdoctoral fellow, described the latter chemical as something akin to drain cleaner.
Previous missions over the past two decades, such as NASA’s Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, found ice in the hard-to-reach craters around the moon's poles that are permanently in shadow. Scientists also reexamined the famous Apollo moon samples in 2008 and found water molecules in glass beads and minerals within them. That discovery was somewhat controversial, though, as some were skeptical of whether the water came from the moon or moisture contamination in Houston.
Then in November 2020, a month before the Chinese lander detected water from the surface of the moon, NASA announced it could indeed confirm water was in a sunny part of the moon — without going there. Flying a jet up to 45,000 feet, NASA used the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, or SOFIA, to pick up the distinct wavelength signals of water molecules. The telescope finding suggested water might be widespread on the moon, not just frozen at its poles.
A researcher looks at lunar soil brought back from the moon by China's Chang'E-5 probe.Credit: VCG/VCG via Getty ImagesMany previous measurements have seen potential water, but none of those studies occurred on the moon itself — until now. The difference, Siegler said, is that spectral reflectance data has to be corrected for the temperature of the object to figure out how much water is in it. Otherwise, heat from the moon's surface could change or mask the reflected light features. But it’s hard to know the precise temperature of a target at an extreme distance, he said.
“That's what's kind of significant about this one on the lunar surface,” he said. “You know that (specific) rock, and they're able to measure the temperature of it, and there’s none of this ambiguity.”
Chang’E-5 didn't find lagoons, gushing rivers or cascading waterfalls in the previously unexplored area. Think much smaller: traces of water in the soil where it landed, a region perhaps ironically referred to as the Oceanus Procellarum, or "Ocean of Storms." Researchers believe that water was likely formed by solar wind, the gasses flowing off the sun. When the solar wind, which has hydrogen atoms, hits the oxygen in the moon’s soil and rocks, it sometimes makes water.
A moon rock from the same location contained a higher concentration of water than the soil around it, suggesting it had another water source — not just solar wind. The pumice-like rock fragment may have broken off from an older volcanic rock deep within the moon and ejected to the landing site, the researchers said.
A figure in a new study published in Science Advances depicts water content at the Chang’E-5 landing site.Credit: LIN HongleiParvathy Prem, a scientist at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, said she was still smiling days after reading the new study.
“Just as interesting as the rock itself is that the region around it seems to be drier,” she said in an email, an observation that raises more questions about the different ways water is forming and staying on the moon.
Despite the lander’s detection of water, it wasn’t much. Some of the driest places on Earth, such as the Antarctic Dry Valleys, usually have soil moisture content ranging from 0.2 to 5% water, Prem said. The moon rock had about 0.018%, and the nearby soil had just 0.012%, according to the study.
Chang’E-5 was the first moon mission to collect and return material since 1976, when the Soviet Union’s Luna 24 probe brought back samples. The last time NASA retrieved moon rocks was 50 years ago in 1972.
It's much easier and more precise to study a single moon rock up close in its environment than with a telescope, Siegler said.
“You’re not going to measure that from Earth,” Siegler said. “If America wants to do this kind of science, we have to be on the moon.”
TopicsInnovations
Darth Vader is back. Why do we still care?2024-11-24 12:08
沙特主帥:同組對手都很難對付 我們將捍衛沙特的名字2024-11-24 12:07
卡納瓦羅:告別廣州隊非常心痛 不僅想念中國還感恩2024-11-24 11:44
曝曼城開2年合同邀請布斯克茨 布教授瓜帥或再聚首2024-11-24 11:40
Twitter grants everyone access to quality filter for tweet notifications2024-11-24 11:32
國足公布中沙戰23人名單 :武磊領銜鋒線 蒿俊閔王剛缺席2024-11-24 11:16
沙特主帥 :同組對手都很難對付 我們將捍衛沙特的名字2024-11-24 10:51
沙特或沿用戰日本防線人選 4主力將複出變數在中鋒2024-11-24 10:14
U.S. government issues warning on McDonald's recalled wearable devices2024-11-24 10:10
滬媒:國足戰沙特很難創造奇跡 須增強中場防守力度2024-11-24 09:51
Whyd voice2024-11-24 11:33
葡萄牙前瞻 :衝擊小組第一必勝戰 C羅或再現克星本色2024-11-24 11:24
曝再有中超球隊被禁止引援 武漢隊曾在9月遭足協處罰2024-11-24 11:23
U22國足退賽不會受懲罰 自2018年以來尚未踢過大賽2024-11-24 10:46
Here's George Takei chilling in zero gravity for the 'Star Trek' anniversary2024-11-24 10:44
荷蘭前瞻:戰魚腩球隊 鬱金香衝4連勝盼穩坐榜首2024-11-24 10:27
封閉條件受限國足兩天未戰術演練 如何迎戰沙特仍不明朗2024-11-24 10:02
國足吉達首訓未安排分組對抗 封閉條件不理想保守戰術秘密2024-11-24 09:52
Watch MTV's Video Music Awards 2016 livestream2024-11-24 09:43
十佳球:摩洛哥神鋒倒勾破門 小哈吉打爆德國防線2024-11-24 09:36