杏吧原创

Man in the Moon’s cataclysmic birth revealed

Powerful ancient impacts on the far side of the Moon may have created one of the most famous faces the Earth has ever known
The Man in the Moon is always happy to see you, but can you see him?
The Man in the Moon is always happy to see you, but can you see him?
(Image: NASA)

Shock waves from ancient lunar impacts may be responsible for creating the Earth鈥檚 single most famous face 鈥 the 鈥淢an in the Moon鈥.

People have long interpreted a series of dark patches on the Moon鈥檚 surface as a human face but no one knew how they formed. Now, scientists at Ohio State University, US, appear to have solved the mystery by creating a topographical model of the Moon and mapping gravity signatures of rocks all the way to the core.

Their findings suggest that the impacts of ancient collisions on the far side of the Moon were so great they caused a corresponding bulge on the near side, and the Earth鈥檚 gravitational pull further tugged at this bulge.

Those colossal movements opened cracks in the crust and let magma from the lunar mantle flood onto the surface, at a time when the Moon was still geologically active. This solidified to form what we now see from Earth as the eyes, nose and mouth of the Man in the Moon.

Rocked to the core

鈥淲here you have impact craters, you get an anomalous distribution of mass, and that鈥檚 what shows up on the gravity field model,鈥 explains Ralph von Frese, a geologist at Ohio State, and one of the team.

鈥淭he impacts were huge enough to disrupt the Moon to its core and at the same time Earth鈥檚 gravity field moved mass preferentially to the nearside. Because this happened when the Moon was solidifying, the movements of mass produced a gravity anomaly that we can measure four billion years later.鈥

The researchers used gravity fluctuations measured by NASA鈥檚 Clementine and Lunar Prospector satellites to map the moon鈥檚 interior.

Journal reference: Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (DOI: 10.1016/j.pepi.2005.06.013)