Khaleej Times

The Moon has more water than we thought

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paris — The Moon, long thought to be a dry, inhospitab­le orb, hosts surprising­ly large sub-surface water reserves, which one day may quench the thirst of lunar explorers from Earth, scientists said on Monday.

“We found the signature of the lunar interior water globally using satellite data,” Shuai Li, co-author of a study by scientists at Brown University in the United States, said.

“Such water can be used as in situ resources for future exploratio­n,” said Li, a postdoctor­al researcher at the University of Hawaii and Brown Ph.D graduate.

Li noted scientists had believed the Moon to be “bone dry” until about a decade ago, when scientists found evidence of water — an essential ingredient for life — in pebble-like beads brought back by Apollo missions.

The Brown findings show numerous volcanic deposits distribute­d across the surface of the Moon contain “unusually high amounts of trapped water” compared with surroundin­g terrain.

They say discovery of water in the ancient deposits, which are believed to consist of glass beads formed by the explosive eruption of magma from beneath the Moon’s surface, boosts the idea that the lunar mantle is surprising­ly waterrich.

“The key question is whether those Apollo samples represent the bulk conditions of the lunar interior or instead represent unusual or perhaps anomalous water-rich regions within an otherwise ‘dry’ mantle,” said Ralph Milliken, lead author of the new research, published in the Nature Geoscience journal on Monday.

“By looking at the orbital data, we can examine the large pyroclasti­c deposits on the Moon that were never sampled by the Apollo or (Soviet) Luna missions,” said the associate professor at Brown’s Department of Earth, Environmen­tal and Planetary Sciences. “The fact that nearly all of them exhibit signatures of water suggests that the Apollo samples are not anomalous, so it may be that the bulk interior of the Moon is wet.”—

 ?? AFP ?? New data gives an insight into how the Moon was formed. —
AFP New data gives an insight into how the Moon was formed. —

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