Friday, January 16, 2015

Solving The Mystery Of The “Man In The Moon”

MIT researchers find that a volcanic plume, not an asteroid, likely created the moon’s largest basin. New data obtained by NASA’s GRAIL mission reveals that the Procellarum region on the near side of the moon — a giant basin often referred to as the “man in the moon” — likely arose not from a massive asteroid strike, but from a large plume of magma deep within the moon’s interior. The moon as observed in visible light (left), topography (center, where red is high and blue is low), and the GRAIL gravity gradients (right). The Procellarum region is a broad region of low topography covered in dark mare basalt.



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