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Moon mystery: Why our Earth's satellite is lemon-shaped | Moon mystery: Why our Earth's satellite is lemon-shaped |
(about 17 hours later) | |
Scientists have worked out the reasons for the distorted shape of our Moon. | Scientists have worked out the reasons for the distorted shape of our Moon. |
A US team calculated the effect on the shape of the early Moon of tidal and rotational forces. | A US team calculated the effect on the shape of the early Moon of tidal and rotational forces. |
Writing in Nature, they say its own spin and the tidal tug of the Earth created a "lemon-shaped" satellite. | |
Lead researcher Ian Garrick-Bethell, from the University of California Santa Cruz, said this shape-shifting occurred when the Moon was mostly liquid beneath a thin outer crust of rock. | Lead researcher Ian Garrick-Bethell, from the University of California Santa Cruz, said this shape-shifting occurred when the Moon was mostly liquid beneath a thin outer crust of rock. |
This interaction with the Earth also caused the Moon to shift slightly on its own axis. | This interaction with the Earth also caused the Moon to shift slightly on its own axis. |
"For the Earth and Mars and other bodies, we know that the dominant shape of the planet is due to its spin," he said. | "For the Earth and Mars and other bodies, we know that the dominant shape of the planet is due to its spin," he said. |
"If you take a water balloon and start spinning it, it will bulge out at the equator, and on the Earth, we have something very similar to that." | "If you take a water balloon and start spinning it, it will bulge out at the equator, and on the Earth, we have something very similar to that." |
This effect, however, does not explain how "surprisingly distorted" our Moon is. | This effect, however, does not explain how "surprisingly distorted" our Moon is. |
"It's spinning really slowly, and it's really far from the Earth, so it's not like tides today could be causing that." | "It's spinning really slowly, and it's really far from the Earth, so it's not like tides today could be causing that." |
Prof Garrick-Bethell's new explanation is that four billion years ago - when the Moon formed from the debris thrown out by a huge impact between early Earth and a so-called planetoid - was much closer to the Earth. This meant tides were stronger. | Prof Garrick-Bethell's new explanation is that four billion years ago - when the Moon formed from the debris thrown out by a huge impact between early Earth and a so-called planetoid - was much closer to the Earth. This meant tides were stronger. |
"The Moon was [also] spinning much faster," he told BBC News. | "The Moon was [also] spinning much faster," he told BBC News. |
"So there's a variety of interesting things that could happen, at that time when the Moon was really hot, that could change its shape." | "So there's a variety of interesting things that could happen, at that time when the Moon was really hot, that could change its shape." |
Heating and stretching | Heating and stretching |
When the Moon first formed, it was liquid rock. As it cooled, the outer crust solidified and floated on this viscous ocean. | When the Moon first formed, it was liquid rock. As it cooled, the outer crust solidified and floated on this viscous ocean. |
The gravitational tug of the Earth raised tides on the Moon that started to "flex and pull on that thin crust", said Prof Garrick-Bethell. | The gravitational tug of the Earth raised tides on the Moon that started to "flex and pull on that thin crust", said Prof Garrick-Bethell. |
He and his colleagues were inspired in this idea by an earlier study of one of Jupiter's moon's Europa. | He and his colleagues were inspired in this idea by an earlier study of one of Jupiter's moon's Europa. |
Europa has an ice crust floating on a liquid ocean of water. | Europa has an ice crust floating on a liquid ocean of water. |
In a 2013 study, researchers from the University of Texas at Austin calculated how tidal heating - caused by Jupiter's tug on that warmer liquid water - was distributed in Europa's icy shell. | In a 2013 study, researchers from the University of Texas at Austin calculated how tidal heating - caused by Jupiter's tug on that warmer liquid water - was distributed in Europa's icy shell. |
Prof Garrick-Bethell's team realised that a similar effect could have occurred in the liquid rock ocean on the early Moon. | Prof Garrick-Bethell's team realised that a similar effect could have occurred in the liquid rock ocean on the early Moon. |
They also solved the mathematical problems caused by large craters and basins on the Moon's surface that formed after the crust solidified. | They also solved the mathematical problems caused by large craters and basins on the Moon's surface that formed after the crust solidified. |
These have previously caused problems for past attempts to interpret its shape. They're essentially chunks of "missing Moon" that make it difficult to map its co-ordinates and work out how its original spherical shape would have been rearranged. | These have previously caused problems for past attempts to interpret its shape. They're essentially chunks of "missing Moon" that make it difficult to map its co-ordinates and work out how its original spherical shape would have been rearranged. |
"We did a lot of work to estimate the uncertainties in the analysis that result from those gaps [in the data]," Prof Garrick-Bethell said. | "We did a lot of work to estimate the uncertainties in the analysis that result from those gaps [in the data]," Prof Garrick-Bethell said. |
The result, the researchers claim, is the best explanation yet of the Moon's odd shape. | The result, the researchers claim, is the best explanation yet of the Moon's odd shape. |