How to Get Water on the Moon
Kohler, Susanna
Abstract
Given plans for future manned missions to the Moon and interest in the potential for longer-term lunar habitation the presence of water on the Moon is of critical importance. Studies over the last few decades have revealed water lurking on our satellite in numerous forms. But how does it get there?Water In, Water OutOverview of the lunar OH/H2 abundance in the polar regions of the Moon, as derived from M3 observations in January/February 2009. [Adapted from Wang et al. 2021]Lunar water has been found locked in ice form in the cold, permanently shadowed craters at the Moons poles, and drifting in gas form in the very thin lunar atmosphere. In addition, weve discovered that water exists in trace amounts across the Moons surface, bound to lunar minerals.But lunar water is more complicated than its mere presence or absence. The Moon is also thought to have a water cycle water is continuously created on or delivered to the Moons surface, and then destroyed on or removed from it.Understanding the driving processes in this cycle will enable us to best leverage the Moons resources and deepen our insight into the physics that influences airless rocky bodies throughout our solar system and beyond.Identifying ProcessesBased on laboratory experiments and lunar observations, heres our understanding so far:ProductionWe think the continuous production of lunar surface water may largely be driven by incoming protons hydrogen nuclei from the solar wind, which then bind with the oxygen in lunar minerals to form water. Other processes may also contribute, like production from additional sources of incoming protons, or episodic delivery of water via comets and asteroids.RemovalWater on the Moons surface is primarily removed through continuous processes like photodissociation the decomposition of water molecules by sunlight.With the rich observations recently produced by missions like NASAs Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) spectrometer on Indias Chandrayaan-1 orbiting probe, were currently in an excellent position to test this understanding.In a new publication led by Huizi Wang (Shandong University and Chinese Academy of Sciences), a joint team of space physicists and planetary scientists presents an exploration of water production on the surface of the Moon.Windy ProductionSchematic showing the Moons orbit around the Earth. The Moon spends 35 days each orbit passing through the Earths magnetosphere, where it is shielded from the solar wind. [Adapted from Wang et al. 2021]As the Moon circles the Earth, it spends 35 days each month shielded from the solar wind by the Earths magnetosphere. If incoming protons from the solar wind are the primary driver of lunar water production, Wang and collaborators argue, then measurements of lunar water abundance should show a decrease during those 35 days, assuming water continues to be destroyed at the same rate via photodissociation.Instead, the authors find that spectroscopy from M3 reveals no change in water abundances over the complete lunar orbit, despite observations showing the expected drop in incoming solar wind energy when the Moon passes through Earths magnetosphere.Could another source contribute to production of water on the Moon, keeping abundances constant? Wang and collaborators demonstrate that when the Moon is shielded from the solar wind, incoming protons from the Earths wind a weaker stream of charged particles from the Earths magnetosphere could provide the protons needed to maintain observed water abundances on the Moons surface.There are still many open questions, but the future holds more opportunities to refine our understanding. The Chinese Change 5 lunar mission successfully measured lunar material and brought samples back to Earth late last year, and the planned Artemis missions to the Moon will soon provide further insight.CitationEarth Wind as a Possible Exogenous Source of Lunar Surface Hydration, H. Z. Wang et al 2021 ApJL 907 L32. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/abd559