Published December 1, 2023
| Published
Journal Article
Origin of the Moon
Abstract
The Earth–Moon system is unusual in several respects. The Moon is roughly ¼ the radius of the Earth—a larger satellite-to-planet size ratio than all known satellites other than Pluto’s Charon. The Moon has a tiny core, perhaps with only ~1% of its mass, in contrast to Earth whose core contains nearly 30% of its mass. The Earth–Moon system has a high total angular momentum, implying a rapidly spinning Earth when the Moon formed. In addition, the early Moon was hot and at least partially molten with a deep magma ocean. Identification of a model for lunar origin that can satisfactorily explain all of these features has been the focus of decades of research.
Copyright and License
© 2023 by the Mineralogical Society of America.
Additional details
- Available
-
2023-12-04First Online
- Caltech groups
- Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences
- Publication Status
- Published