Moon is still shrinking from birth...

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MeteorWayne

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http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/s ... 00819.html

The moon is shrinking ever so slightly, but there is no cause for alarm, according to a new study that has discovered a clutch of previously unseen faults on the lunar surface from photos taken by a NASA probe.

In all, 14 previously undetected small thrust faults – the physical markers of contraction on the lunar surface– were found to be globally distributed around the moon in thousands of photos returned by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.

These fault structures – called lobate scarps – are among the youngest landforms on the moon. Their distribution across the lunar surface (as opposed to regional distribution), suggests that cooling in the moon's interior is the likely cause of the contraction, or shrinkage, said study leader Thomas Watters, a scientist with the Center for Earth and Planetary Studies at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum....

"The surface is pushed together by internal forces," Watters told SPACE.com. "When it breaks, it literally thrusts material upward because the surface is contracting. That contraction, we think, is coming from internal cooling of the moon. We now know that's a global process, so it means the moon is shrinking globally – very likely because it is continuing to cool."

The research is detailed in the Aug. 20 issue of the journal Science.
 
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3488

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Newly discovered cliffs in the lunar crust indicate the moon shrank in the recent past (geologically speaking) and might still be shrinking today according to a team analyzing new images from NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft. The results provide important clues to the moon's rec...........

LRO captures evidence of lunar 'shrinkage'.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pHW0aOBYiMk[/youtube]

Lunar thrust faults remarkably similar to the rupes on Mercury, point to a similar origin. With the moon it amounts to only a few hundred metres, but is still a very significant discovery about our moon.

Andrew Brown.
 
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csmyth3025

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Is there any way to estimate the internal (core) temperature of the moon? (or Mars, for that matter)

Chris
 
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kg

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csmyth3025":1hfkaun1 said:
Is there any way to estimate the internal (core) temperature of the moon? (or Mars, for that matter)
Chris

Yes, one of the experiments deployed on the moon by the Apollo astronauts was the Heat Flow Experiment (HFE). I'm sorry, I can't seem to put my finger on any of the results of that experiment at the moment.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_Lun ... ts_Package

The HFE was designed to make thermal measurements of the Lunar subsurface in order to determine the rate at which heat flows out of the interior. The measurements could help determine the abundance of radioisotopes and help understand the thermal evolution of the Moon. The HFE consisted of an electronics box and two probes. Each probe was place in a hole by an astronaut that was drilled to about 2.5 m deep.
 
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