The moon is our closest neighbor in space and the only natural satellite
to orbit the earth. It has a lower density than the earth (3.3 g/cm3
vs. 5.5 g/cm3) and is about ¼ the size of the earth. The moon
has no atmosphere and only 1/6 the surface gravity of the earth.
It orbits the earth in such a way that it always keeps the same face towards
the earth. The side facing the earth consists of dark (basaltic)
lava filled basins called mare (maria) or seas. The lighter
areas are heavily impacted terrain called the highlands. Look at
the picture above.
This page has a link to a QuickTime movie (1.8 Mb) that lets you see the entire surface of the moon.
The Apollo astronauts brought back over 800 pounds of moon rocks
from both the maria and highlands and found that the maria formed 3.2 - 3.8
billion years ago and the highlands are even older ... some rocks dating up to
4.5 billion years old (the oldest earth rocks are about 4 billion
years old ... and very rare).
This suggests that the moon, earth, and other planets all formed (rather quickly) from this smaller debris that was floating around. Astronomers call this the planetesimal hypothesis. Although we can't look back in our own solar system ... astronomers can look at other young stars, and this is exactly what they see ... evidence of debris orbiting in a disk around these stars (the first found was around a star called Beta Pictoris). We know that there still exists evidence of this earlier state in our solar system ... the asteroid belt. Astronomers believe that the entire solar system 4.6 billion years ago (the common date of most meteorites) was like this area. Under gravity, these smaller objects collected into larger and larger objects (by collisions) until they reached planetary sizes. It would also explain why the rates of impact would suddenly cease. As the planets grow (from the collection of these smaller objects), there would be less and less of these smaller objects floating around as time went on. By 3.8 billion years ago, most were swept up into making planets. The planetesimal hypothesis received another boost when planets were discovered orbiting other stars. At last count, over 100 planets (called extra-solar planets) have been discovered outside our solar system.
(animation)
The bad news is ... not all of these objects are gone. Estimates
are that there are
several thousand rocky fragments ½ mile
in diameter which have earth crossing orbits, and they will hit the earth
sooner or (hopefully) later. Eyes were wide open in 1994 when the
earth witnessed a collision of a comet
Shoemaker-Levy
9 with Jupiter. When chicken little cried "the sky is falling"
... she could be very correct! Most geologist now accept the idea
that an impact with the earth 65 million years ago (known as the K/T
event) lead to the mass extinction of almost ¾ of all species
(including the dinosaurs). Other mass extinction event about
250 million years ago also appears to be from an impact
as well as an event that may have lead to a mass extinction during the "age of
fishes"
380 million years ago. Finally another
smaller impact about 700,000 - 800,000 years ago severely changed the
human population on
earth. This is based on the age of Australasian
tektites. It's not a matter of if
it could happen again ... only when!
Click here to see a nice on-line lecture about the moon.
©Jim Mihal 2004 - all rights reserved