June 21, 2012

From LPOD
Revision as of 08:30, 28 October 2018 by Api (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Hyping the Wrong Interpretation

LPOD-Jun21-12.jpg
topographic images credited to NASA/Zuber, M.T. et al., Nature, 2012

There is some water near the Moon's poles. LCROSS detected a bucket full, and the Mini-RF radar of Chandrayaan-1 probably saw more than that. But there is no convincing evidence that the LRO altimetry data (LOLA) discovered any at all, but that isn't the way the story is being told. In the current issue of Nature, Maria Zuber and colleagues report that the floor of Shackleton, a 21 km wide crater whose rim - one part - marks the South Pole, is brighter (at laser wavelengths) than other nearby crater floors. That could be due to it having about 22% water ice content. But the walls of Shackleton are even brighter, including the parts occasionally illuminated by grazing sunlight. The illuminated parts can not retain water ice so the Zuber team propose that it is bright, just as tens of thousands of other crater walls are, because downslope movement constantly removes material darkened by space weathering to expose fresh, unweathered soil. That is quite likely. Could there be two explanations for brightness - the walls have an accepted, physically likely, if not certain, process at work, and the floor brightness is due to a hoped for but mostly undocumented deposit of water ice? It is possible, but I think unlikely. The Nature authors suggest that the most likely explanation is that the deep hole of a crater at a lunar pole protects the floor from space weathering, keeping it anomalously bright. Or deposition from comet impacts could create a micron thick water/ice layer. But the downslope movement of wall debris must have coated the floor with more than a micron - the deepest that LOLA penetrates - of rock dust. Water ice at the top surface of any crater floor is very unlikely. But the NASA press release includes the word ice in its title and much of the story is about the interpretation that the authors dismiss. No wonder all the news stories are that this is a discovery of ice. With this much spinning of the evidence the hot air alone would melt any ice on the crater floor.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details
Colors show elevations - blue deep, orange and red high.

Related Links
Rükl plate 73

Yesterday's LPOD: A Little Volcanic Center

Tomorrow's LPOD: Hardly There



COMMENTS?

Register, Log in, and join in the comments.