Millennium Post

Mysterious 'lunar swirls' point to Moon's volcanic, magnetic past

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WASHINGTON DC: The mysterious

lunar swirls, one of the solar system's most beautiful optical anomalies, may be a relic of the Moon's ancient volcanic activity and an internally generated magnetic field, scientists say.

Lunar swirls resemble bright, snaky clouds painted on the Moon's dark surface.

The most famous, called Reiner Gamma, is about 40 miles long and popular with backyard astronomer­s.

Most lunar swirls share their locations with powerful, localised magnetic fields. The bright-and-dark patterns may result when those magnetic fields deflect particles from the solar wind and cause some parts of the lunar surface to weather more slowly.

"But the cause of those magnetic fields, and thus of the swirls themselves, had long been a mystery," said Sonia Tikoo, an assistant professor in Rutgers University in the US.

"To solve it, we had to find out what kind of geological feature could produce these magnetic fields -- and why their magnetism is so powerful," said Tikoo, coauthor of the study published in the Journal of Geophysica­l Research: Planets.

Working with what is known about the intricate geometry of lunar swirls, and the strengths of the magnetic fields associated with them, the researcher­s developed mathematic­al models for the geological "magnets."

They found that each swirl must stand above a magnetic object that is narrow and buried close to the moon's surface.

The picture is consistent with lava tubes, long, narrow structures formed by flowing lava during volcanic eruptions; or with lava dikes, vertical sheets of magma injected into the lunar crust.

Past experiment­s have found that many Moon rocks become highly magnetic when heated more than 600 degrees Celsius in an oxygen-free environmen­t.

That is because certain minerals break down at high temperatur­es and release metallic iron. If there happens to be a strong enough magnetic field nearby, the newly formed iron will become magnetised along the direction of that field.

This does not normally happen on Earth, where free-floating oxygen binds with the iron. It would not happen today on the Moon, where there is no global magnetic field to magnetize the iron.

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