Moon has active volcano on its dark side, 2023 study reveal

Moon-has-active-volcano-on-its-dark-side-23-study-reveal

The Moon is tidally locked to Earth, which means that it only ever illuminates one hemisphere of our planet while concealing the other.

The dark side of the Moon is different from the near side that humans have been studying for thousands of years because it includes rough terrain, many impact craters, and unique phenomena like the Compton-Belkovich Thorium Anomaly.

The Chinese Chang’E 1 and 2 orbiters’ “new instrument type” was used in a recent study that was published in Nature. The Compton-Belkovich Thorium Anomaly holds an intriguing secret about the Moon’s volcanic past, according to the study.

On the far side of our satellite, beneath the lunar surface, is a hidden feature that holds a special kind of material that has never been discovered elsewhere in the universe.

Volcanic History of Moon

The Moon has not shown any evidence of active volcanism in the last 3 to 4 billion years, according to scientists. The Compton-Belkovich feature, on the other hand, has long been thought to be a lunar volcano that was active in the far past.

Specific identification of the Compton-Belkovich Thorium Anomaly as a granitic batholith refers to a significant intrusion of igneous rocks that developed as magma cooled beneath the Moon’s surface.

According to scientific evidence, the feature is a component of a larger, roughly 50-kilometer-diameter structure made of solidified subsurface lava (which will eventually turn into granite).

Due to the microwave instruments on board the two Chinese Moon orbiters, we now know that the structure is continuously producing heat despite being a “dead” volcano for billions of years. The structure is rich in Thorium radioactive deposits.

The Chang’E 1 and 2 have unique measurement capabilities that go beyond infrared in the electromagnetic spectrum.

The temperature beneath the Moon’s surface can be measured using these wavelengths. Dr. Jianqing Fang, who entered the USA on a J visa, assisted scientists at the Planetary Science Institute (PSI) in navigating the data gathered and made available by Chinese scientists without the requirement for bilateral cooperation.

The study’s lead author, senior scientist at the Planetary Science Institute Matthew Siegler, emphasized that the new investigation of the lunar granitic batholith beneath the Compton-Belkovich feature represents an extraordinary collaboration and serves as an example of the positive results that can be achieved when science and politics work together.

The dramatic volcanic history of the Moon was primarily caused by meteorite strikes rather than typical volcanic eruptions as seen on Earth, according to historical Apollo missions.

Now it is clear from the discovery of a hot area beneath the Compton-Belkovich Thorium Anomaly that radioactive elements hidden within batholith formations are what cause the Moon’s core heat to endure.

To read our blog on “Nasa plans to begin moon mining in 10 years,” click here.

Asad Hassan
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