GEOCHEMISTRY
Geochemists study the sources, migrations, and current resting places
of individual chemical elements.
Crustal Composition, Volcanism
and Polar Ice
Lunar Prospector will use its Neutron Spectrometer and Gamma Ray Spectrometer
to determine the bulk elemental composition of the Moon as well as to
identify potential lunar resources, including water ice (in the permanently
shadowed poles).
Water ice:Over time, comets and meteorites continually bombard
the Moon. Water-rich meteorites and comets, largely water ice, may leave
significant traces of water on the lunar surface. Energy from sunlight
splits much of this water into its constituent elements hydrogen and oxygen,
both of which usually fly off into space immediately. Some water molecules,
however, may have literally hopped along the surface and gotten trapped
inside enormous craters -some 1,400 miles (2,240 km) across and nearly
8 miles (13 km) deep - at the lunar poles. Due to the very slight "tilt
" of the Moon's axis, only 1.5°, some of these deep craters
never receive any light from the Sun - they are permanently shadowed.
It is in such craters that scientists expect to find frozen water if it
is there at all. If found, water ice could be mined and then split into
hydrogen and oxygen by solar panel-equipped electric power stations or
a nuclear generator. Such components could make space operations as well
as human colonization on the Moon possible. Although the equatorial Moon
rock collected by Apollo astronauts contained no traces of water, the
recent Clementine mission suggested that small, frozen pockets of water
ice (remnants of water-rich comet impacts) may be embedded unmelted in
the permanently shadowed regions of the lunar crust. Although the pockets
are thought to be small, the overall amount of water was suggested to
be quite significant - one billion cubic meters, or an amount the size
of Lake Erie. The presence of useable quantities of water on the Moon
would be an important factor in rendering lunar habitation cost-effective,
since transporting water (or hydrogen and oxygen) from Earth would be
prohibitively expensive.
KREEP: More than 4.5 billion years ago, the surface of the Moon
was a liquid magma ocean. Scientists think that one component of lunar
rocks, KREEP (K-potassium, Rare Earth Elements, and P-phosphorous), represents
the last chemical remnant of that magma ocean. KREEP is actually a composite
of what scientists term "incompatible elements": those which
cannot fit into a crystal structure and thus were left behind, floating
to the surface of the magma. For researchers, KREEP is a convenient tracer,
useful for reporting the story of the volcanic history of the lunar crust
and chronicling the frequency of impacts by comets and other celestial
bodies.
Primary elements: The lunar crust is composed of a variety of
primary elements, including uranium, thorium, potassium, oxygen, silicon,
magnesium, iron, titanium, calcium, aluminum and hydrogen. When bombarded
by cosmic rays, each element bounces back into space its own radiation,
in the form of gamma rays. Some elements, such as uranium, thorium and
potassium, are radioactive and emit gamma rays on their own. However,
regardless of what causes them, gamma rays for each element are all different
from one another -- each produces a unique spectral "signature,"
detectable by an instrument called a spectrometer. A complete global mapping
of the Moon for the abundance of these elements has never been performed.
Hydrogen and helium: Because its surface is not protected by an
atmosphere, the Moon is constantly exposed to the solar wind, which carries
both hydrogen and helium -- each potentially very valuable resources.
One natural variant of helium, [3]helium, is the ideal material to fuel
fusion reactions. When scientists develop a more thorough understanding
of fusion, and can practically implement such reactions, the Moon will
be a priceless resource, since it is by far the best source of [3]helium
anywhere in the Solar System.
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