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MOON DAILY
NASA Mission Reveals Origins of Moon's 'Sunburn'
by Sarah Frazier for GSFC News
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Feb 28, 2019

Research using data from NASA's ARTEMIS mission suggests that lunar swirls, like the Reiner Gamma lunar swirl imaged here by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, could be the result of solar wind interactions with the Moon's isolated pockets of magnetic field.

Every object, planet or person traveling through space has to contend with the Sun's damaging radiation - and the Moon has the scars to prove it.

Research using data from NASA's ARTEMIS mission - short for Acceleration, Reconnection, Turbulence and Electrodynamics of the Moon's Interaction with the Sun - suggests how the solar wind and the Moon's crustal magnetic fields work together to give the Moon a distinctive pattern of darker and lighter swirls.

The Sun releases a continuous outflow of particles and radiation called the solar wind. The solar wind washes over the planets, moons and other bodies in our solar system, filling a bubble of space - called the heliosphere - that extends far past the orbit of Pluto.

Here on Earth, we're largely protected from the damaging effects of the solar wind: Because the solar wind is magnetized, Earth's natural magnetic field deflects the solar wind particles around our planet so that only a small fraction of them reach our planet's atmosphere.

But unlike Earth, the Moon has no global magnetic field. However, magnetized rocks near the lunar surface do create small, localized spots of magnetic field that extend anywhere from hundreds of yards to hundreds of miles.

This is the kind of information that needs to be well understood to better protect astronauts on the Moon from the effects of radiation. The magnetic field bubbles by themselves aren't robust enough to protect humans from that harsh radiation environment, but studying their structure could help develop techniques to protect our future explorers.

"The magnetic fields in some regions are locally acting as this magnetic sunscreen," said Andrew Poppe, a scientist at the University of California, Berkeley, who researches the Moon's crustal magnetic fields using data from NASA's ARTEMIS mission along with simulations of the Moon's magnetic environment.

These small bubbles of magnetic "sunscreen" can also deflect solar wind particles - but on a much smaller scale than Earth's magnetic field. While they aren't enough to protect astronauts by themselves, they do have a fundamental effect on the Moon's appearance.

Under these miniature magnetic umbrellas, the material that makes up the Moon's surface, called regolith, is shielded from the Sun's particles. As those particles flow toward the Moon, they are deflected to the areas just around the magnetic bubbles, where chemical reactions with the regolith darken the surface.

This creates the distinctive swirls of darker and lighter material that are so prominent they can be seen from Earth - one more piece of the puzzle to help us understand the neighbor NASA plans to re-visit within the next decade.

Research paper

Research paper


Related Links
ARTEMIS mission -
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more


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MOON DAILY
NASA selects experiments for possible lunar flights in 2019
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 22, 2019
NASA has selected 12 science and technology demonstration payloads to fly to the Moon as early as the end of this year, dependent upon the availability of commercial landers. These selections represent an early step toward the agency's long-term scientific study and human exploration of the Moon and, later, Mars. "The Moon has unique scientific value and the potential to yield resources, such as water and oxygen," said NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine. "Its proximity to Earth makes it especially ... read more

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