MOON DAILY
PSI study shows evidence of highly mobile lunar regolith
A new study of Lunar swirls shows evidence of highly mobile regolith on the Moon, according to a team of PSI scientists led by Deborah Domingue.
PSI study shows evidence of highly mobile lunar regolith
by Staff Writers
Tucson AZ (SPX) Aug 30, 2023
Swirls are enigmatic albedo (light reflection) patterns on the lunar surface associated with local magnetic anomalies. The processes involved in their formation have been examined and debated since their discovery. The most popular idea is shielding of the surface from solar wind radiation by the associated magnetic anomaly. This explains the swirling pattern, as shielded material would be brighter than radiated materials outside the magnetic field. However, the spectral properties don't always match what is expected of shielded materials.

Another hypothesis is that dust that is electrostatically levitated is preferentially segregated and trapped by the magnetic field. The electrostatically-levitated lunar dust is the smallest size portion of lunar dust , which on the Moon is intrinsically made of brighter minerals than the larger sizes which are more difficult to electrostatically move.

The darker dust includes small inclusions (tiny pieces of material inside a grain made of a different material than the grain itself) of nanometer-scale iron, which is thought to be magnetically separated and deposited in the dark areas of the swirls. Ironically, one way to produce this nanometer-scale iron is by solar wind radiation.

So, which is it? One approach to answering this question is to examine the texture of the surface. The texture is the soil grain-to-grain (or in this case dust-to-dust) roughness and porosity and the structures within the grains (such as inclusions). A group of PSI scientists examined the texture of the surface in a region in Mare Ingenii using the tools of photometric analysis.

Photometric analysis is based on how material scatters light and how those scattering properties change as the illumination (angle of the sunlight to the surface) and viewing (position of your spacecraft) geometries change. What they discovered is that the grain-to-grain roughness was similar across the swirl region, but that the soil in the dark lanes have grains with a more complicated structure.

In addition, they also show that the composition between the bright and dark areas are different, following the expectations from dust collection and segregation.

"The evidence, which includes recent correlation of topographic lows with the bright areas of the swirls, tells a story that more than one process is involved in their formation", said lead author Deborah Domingue. "We definitely see evidence that the bright areas are less radiated, but this doesn't explain all the properties of the swirls. Something else is operating, and the textures suggest dust collection and segregation are part of the tale."

PSI scientists John Weirich, Frank Chuang, Amanda Sickafoose, Samuel Courville, Eric Palmer and Robert Gaskell also worked on the research.

Related Links
Planetary Science Institute
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more

Tweet

MOON DAILY
LRO data helping NASA prepare for Artemis astronauts on the Moon
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Aug 30, 2023
When astronauts set off for a trip around the Moon in 2024 with NASA's Artemis II mission, they will go primed with knowledge of lunar landmarks gathered by one of the Agency's premiere robotic missions to our nearest cosmic neighbor. NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), launched in 2009, has returned a treasure trove of scientific data in its fourteen years of operation, but this is not all the benefit it can provide. With "reconnaissance" right in the name, it should come as no surprise that thi ... read more

MOON DAILY
SpaceX launches new batch of Space Defense Agency missile tracking satellites

Ukraine receives new air defence systems from Berlin

Israel says US okays 'landmark' missile defence deal with Germany

Northrop Grumman begins producing NGI solid rocket motor booster cases

MOON DAILY
North Korea fires two short-range ballistic missiles

Two killed by falling debris after missile strike on Kyiv: authorities

Australia agrees to buy long-range missiles from US

Kim Jong Un inspects cruise missile test as South Korea-U.S. military drills begin

MOON DAILY
Ukraine says Pskov UAV strike launched from inside Russian territory

Ukraine air force says destroys 22 Russian drones in Odesa region

Drone attack on Russian airport near Estonia border: official

Russia hit by mass UAV offensive; 2 killed in Kyiv in rain of missiles, drones

MOON DAILY
Hughes awarded Space Force IDIQ Contract for LEO satellite services

Lockheed Martin to supply 36 Small Satellites to advance SDA satcom network

USSF contracts OneWeb for commercial LEO communications services

RTX to develop platform agnostic, beyond-line-of-sight, satcoms

MOON DAILY
US approves $1.5 billion in armored vehicles to Bulgaria

Japan's Defense Ministry seeks record $53B military budget for 2024

US charges man with smuggling military tech to Russia

Biden admin. announces another security package for Ukraine

MOON DAILY
British defence giant BAE sets up base in Ukraine

In Sudan's east, murky arms trade thrives as war rages

China says anti-corruption efforts within military 'will never stop'

US sanctions entities tied to Russia, N. Korea arms deals

MOON DAILY
Pope offers apparent gesture to China during visit to Mongolia

UK needs more coherent China strategy: MPs' report

G20 host India launches military drills near China border

Be 'good citizens', Pope tells Chinese Catholics during Mongolia visit

MOON DAILY
World Nano Foundation highlights nanotech's role in space materials science