Water on the Moon is stored in beads of glass created by meteorite impacts

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International
Image by PollyDot from Pixabay
Image by PollyDot from Pixabay

Glass beads found on the moon could store substantial quantities of water, according to international researchers, who say that the beads are formed from the cooling of melted material that was ejected by meteorite impacts and strewn across the Moon's surface. These findings, which are a result of analyses of samples from China’s Chang’e-5 mission, suggest that lunar soils contain a higher amount of water than previously thought, they say. Although it was previously thought the moon was dry, the analyses of lunar samples collected during the Apollo missions revealed water trapped within minerals from the lunar interior, and it is now believed that the interaction of the solar wind with surface materials could produce and sustain a water cycle on the moon's surface.

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From: Springer Nature

Geoscience: Water on the Moon stored in beads of impact glass

Glass beads formed from the cooling of melted material ejected by impacts and found strewn across the Moon could store substantial quantities of water, according to a study published in Nature Geoscience. These findings, as a result of analyses of samples from China’s Chang’e-5 mission, suggest that lunar soils contain a higher amount of solar wind-derived water than previously thought.

Although the Moon was once thought to be dry, analyses of samples collected during the Apollo missions revealed water trapped within minerals from the lunar interior and orbiters have detected the presence of water across the lunar surface. It is thought that the interaction of the solar wind with surface materials could produce water and sustain a water cycle on the Moon’s surface. However, a reservoir of lunar surface water has yet to be identified.

Sen Hu, Hejiu Hui and colleagues analysed the water content within glass beads produced by impact events, extracted from Chang’e-5 lunar soil samples. They identify water stored within the impact glass that is consistent with a solar wind origin. Furthermore, the distribution of water within individual beads indicates that water can rapidly accumulate in glass beads by diffusion, over timescales of only a few years, and be rapidly released. The authors suggest this presents an efficient recharge mechanism to drive an active water cycle on the lunar surface.

The authors suggest that the water trapped in impact glass beads could represent a potential water resource for future lunar exploration that is relatively easy to extract. They conclude that impact glass may host similar water reservoirs on other airless bodies.

Journal/
conference:
Nature Geoscience
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Funder: This study was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42241104 and 41973062 to S.H.), the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDB 41000000 to W.Y.), the key research programme of Chinese Academy of Sciences (ZDBS-SSW-JSC007-15 to W.Y.), the key research programme of the Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences (IGGCAS-202101 to W.Y. and 201904 and 202204 to S.H.) and Pre-research project on Civil Aerospace Technologies by CNSA (D020201, D020203, and D020205 to S.H., W.Y., and H. Hui., respectively). M.A. and R.T. acknowledge funding from the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council (grant #ST/P000657/1 and #ST/P005225/1, respectively).
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