Thursday, May 14, 2020
What Are Moon Craters How Were They Formed
Moon craters are bowl-shaped landforms created by two processes: volcanism and cratering. There are hundreds of thousands of moon craters ranging from less than a mile across to giant basins called mare, which were once thought to be seas. Did You Know? Lunar scientists estimate that there are more than 300,000 craters larger than half a mile across just on the side of the Moon we can see from Earth (the near side). The far side is more heavily cratered and is still being charted. How Did Moon Craters Form? For a long time, scientists did not know how the craters on the Moon were formed. Although there were several theories, it wasnt until astronauts actually went to the Moon and got rock samples for scientists to study that suspicions were confirmed. The detailed analysis of Moon rocks brought back by the Apollo astronauts showed that volcanism and cratering have shaped the Moons surface since its formation, about 4.5 billion years ago, shortly after Earth was formed. Giant impact basins formed on the infant Moons surface, which caused molten rock to well up and create giant pools of cooled lava. Scientists called these mare (Latin for seas). That early volcanism deposited the basaltic rocks. NASAââ¬â¢s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) used a laser-ranging instrument to map the Moonââ¬â¢s topography in high definition, mapping the location of more than 5,000 craters over 12 miles in diameter, and countless others smaller in size. They do this in order to understand the distribution of different crater sizes and to understand the cratering events that have changed the lunar surface over the past 4.5 billion years. The false colors here show the locations of larger craters mapped by the spacecraft. à NASA/LRO Impact Craters: Created by Space Debris Throughout its existence, the Moon has been bombarded by comets and asteroid chunks, and those created the many impact craters we see today. They are in pretty much the same shape they were after they were created. This is because there is no air or water on the Moon to erode or blow away the crater edges. Since the Moon has been pounded by impactors (and continues to be bombarded by smaller rocks as well as the solar wind and cosmic rays), the surface is also covered by a layer of broken rocks called regolith and a very fine layer of dust. Beneath the surface lies a thick layer of fractured bedrock, which pays testament to the action of impacts over billions of years. The largest crater on the Moon is called South Pole-Aitkin Basin. Its about 1,600 miles across (2,500 kilometers). Its also among the oldest of the Moons impact basins and formed just a few hundred million years or so after the Moon itself was formed. Scientists suspect that it was created when a slow-moving projectile (also called an impactor) crashed into the surface. This object was probably several hundred feet across and came in from space at a low angle.à Why Craters Look the Way They Do Most craters have a pretty characteristic round shape, sometimes surrounded by circular ridges (or wrinkles). A few have central peaks, and some have debris scattered around them. The shapes can tell scientists about the size and mass of the impactors and the angle of travel they followed as they smashed into the surface. Impact Crater Diagram. NASA The general story of an impact follows a pretty predictable process. First, the impactor rushes toward the surface. On a world with an atmosphere, the object is heated by friction with the blanket of air. It starts to glow, and if its heated enough, it may break apart and send showers of debris to the surface. When impactors strike the surface of a world, that sends a shockwave out from the impact site. That shock wave breaks up the surface, cracks rock, melts ice, and digs out a huge bowl-shaped cavity. The impact sends material spraying out from the site, while the walls of the newly created crater may fall back in on themselves. In very strong impacts, a central peak forms in the bowl of the crater. The surrounding region may get buckled and wrinkled into ring-shaped formations. The floor, walls, central peak, rim, and ejecta (the material scattered out from an impact site) all tell the tale of the event and how powerful it was. If the incoming rock breaks up, as it usually does, then pieces of the original impactor can be found among the debris.à Barringer Meteor Crater, Arizona. NASA Impact Cratering on Earth and Other Worlds The Moon isnt the only world with craters dug out by incoming rock and ice. Earth itself was pummeled during the same early bombardment that scarred the Moon. On Earth, most craters have been eroded away or buried by shifting landforms or sea encroachment. Only a few, such as Meteor Crater in Arizona, remain. On other planets, such as Mercury and the surface of Mars, craters are quite obvious, and they havent been eroded away. Although Mars may have had a watery past, the craters we see there today are relatively old and still look in fairly good shape. Sources Castelvecchi, Davide. ââ¬Å"Gravity Maps Reveal Why the Moons Far Side Is Covered with Craters.â⬠Scientific American, 10 Nov. 2013, www.scientificamerican.com/article/gravity-maps-reveal-why-dark-side-moon-covered-in-craters/.ââ¬Å"Craters.â⬠Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, astronomy.swin.edu.au/~smaddiso/astro/moon/craters.html.How Craters are Formed, NASA, https://sservi.nasa.gov/articles/how-are-craters-formed/
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