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Moon Storms
Fra : Jan Rasmussen


Dato : 07-06-06 17:11

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2005/07dec_moonstorms.htm?list89139

An old Apollo experiment is telling researchers something new and surprising about the moon.

Every lunar morning, when the sun first peeks over the dusty soil of the moon after
two weeks of frigid lunar night, a strange storm stirs the surface. The next time you
see the moon, trace your finger along the terminator, the dividing line between lunar
night and day. That's where the storm is. It's a long and skinny dust storm, stretching
all the way from the north pole to the south pole, swirling across the surface, following
the terminator as sunrise ceaselessly sweeps around the moon.

Never heard of it? Few have. But scientists are increasingly confident that the storm is real.

The evidence comes from an old Apollo experiment called LEAM, short for Lunar Ejecta
and Meteorites. "Apollo 17 astronauts installed LEAM on the moon in 1972," explains
Timothy Stubbs of the Solar System Exploration Division at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.
"It was designed to look for dust kicked up by small meteoroids hitting the moon's surface."

Billions of years ago, meteoroids hit the moon almost constantly, pulverizing rocks and
coating the moon's surface with their dusty debris. Indeed, this is the reason why the moon
is so dusty. Today these impacts happen less often, but they still happen.

Apollo-era scientists wanted to know, how much dust is ejected by daily impacts? And what
are the properties of that dust? LEAM was to answer these questions using three sensors that
could record the speed, energy, and direction of tiny particles: one each pointing up, east, and west.

LEAM's three-decade-old data are so intriguing, they're now being reexamined by several
independent groups of NASA and university scientists. Gary Olhoeft, professor of geophysics
at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, is one of them:

"To everyone's surprise," says Olhoeft, "LEAM saw a large number of particles every morning,
mostly coming from the east or west--rather than above or below--and mostly slower than
speeds expected for lunar ejecta."

What could cause this? Stubbs has an idea: "The dayside of the moon is positively charged;
the nightside is negatively charged." At the interface between night and day, he explains,
"electrostatically charged dust would be pushed across the terminator sideways," by horizontal
electric fields. (Learn more: "Moon Fountains." )

Even more surprising, Olhoeft continues, a few hours after every lunar sunrise, the experiment's
temperature rocketed so high--near that of boiling water--that "LEAM had to be turned off
because it was overheating."

Those strange observations could mean that "electrically-charged moondust was sticking to
LEAM, darkening its surface so the experiment package absorbed rather than reflected sunlight,"
speculates Olhoeft.

But nobody knows for sure. LEAM operated for a very short time: only 620 hours of data were
gathered during the icy lunar night and a mere 150 hours of data from the blazing lunar day before
its sensors were turned off and the Apollo program ended.

Astronauts may have seen the storms, too. While orbiting the Moon, the crews of Apollo 8, 10, 12,
and 17 sketched "bands" or "twilight rays" where sunlight was apparently filtering through dust above
the moon's surface. This happened before each lunar sunrise and just after each lunar sunset. NASA's
Surveyor spacecraft also photographed twilight "horizon glows," much like what the astronauts saw.

It's even possible that these storms have been spotted from Earth: For centuries, there have been
reports of strange glowing lights on the moon, known as "lunar transient phenomena" or LTPs.
Some LTPs have been observed as momentary flashes--now generally accepted to be visible
evidence of meteoroids impacting the lunar surface. But others have appeared as amorphous
reddish or whitish glows or even as dusky hazy regions that change shape or disappear over
seconds or minutes. Early explanations, never satisfactory, ranged from volcanic gases to
observers' overactive imaginations (including visiting extraterrestrials).

Now a new scientific explanation is gaining traction. "It may be that LTPs are caused by
sunlight reflecting off rising plumes of electrostatically lofted lunar dust," Olhoeft suggests.

All this matters to NASA because, by 2018 or so, astronauts are returning to the Moon.
Unlike Apollo astronauts, who never experienced lunar sunrise, the next explorers are going
to establish a permanent outpost. They'll be there in the morning when the storm sweeps by.

The wall of dust, if it exists, might be diaphanous, invisible, harmless. Or it could be a real
problem, clogging spacesuits, coating surfaces and causing hardware to overheat.

Which will it be? Says Stubbs, "we've still got a lot to learn about the Moon."
------

Var i bekendt med ovenstående fænomen ?
det var total nyt for mig, men jeg er også 'håndværker'



Jan Rasmussen



 
 
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