by Chelsea Gohd
July 14,
2020
from
Space Website
This visualization shows
the
Moon being formed from a collision,
which,
according to a new study,
happened more recently than
scientists previously thought.
(Image
credit: Ron Miller)
It turns out
the Moon is a little younger than
scientists previously thought - about 85 million years younger, to
be precise.
In a new study, researchers at the
German Aerospace Center found out
that, not only did the Moon once have a massive,
fiery magma ocean, but our rocky
satellite also formed later than scientists previously expected.
Billions of years ago, a Mars-size protoplanet smashed into the
young Earth and, amid the debris and cosmic rubble, a new rocky body
formed - our Moon...
In this new work, the
researchers reconstructed the timeline of the moon's formation.
While scientists have
previously thought that this Moon-forming collision happened 4.51
billion years ago, the new work pegged the moon's birth at only
4.425 billion years ago.
To determine this 85-million-year 'error' in the moon's age, the
team used mathematical models to calculate the composition of the
Moon over time.
Based on the idea that
the Moon was host to a massive magma ocean, the researchers
calculated how the minerals that formed as the magma cooled
solidified changed over time.
By following the timeline
of the magma ocean, the scientists were able to trace their way back
to the moon's formation.
"By comparing the
measured composition of the moon's rocks with the predicted
composition of the magma ocean from our model, we were able to
trace the evolution of the ocean back to its starting point, the
time at which the Moon was formed," study co-author Sabrina
Schwinger, a researcher at the German Aerospace Center, said in
a statement.
These findings, which
show that the Moon formed 4.425 billion years ago (give or take 25
million years), agree with previous research that aligned the moon's
formation with the formation of Earth's metallic core, according to
the statement.
"This is the first
time that the age of the Moon can be directly linked to an event
that occurred at the very end of the Earth's formation, namely
the formation of the core," Thorsten Kleine, a professor at the
Institute of Planetology at the University of Münster in
Germany, said in the same statement.
These findings were
described in a new study (A
Long-lived Magma Ocean on a Young Moon) published on July
10 in the journal Science Advances.
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