Supercomputer-Wielding Scientists Say Moon May Have Been Born as Earth Smashed Into Mystery Planet

0
236

Supercomputer-Wielding Scientists Say Moon May Have Been Born as Earth Smashed Into Mystery Planet

Astronomers continue to debate what caused the creation of Earth’s sole natural satellite. Some posit that it was the result of Earth’s collision with another planet shortly after the creation of the Solar System. Others suggest the Moon was ‘captured’ by Earth’s gravitational pull, or even formed out of a proto-Earth in a massive explosion.

Researchers from Durham University and the University of Glasgow have run supercomputer simulations to test the well-worn theory that a mystery Mars-sized planet known as Theia crashed into our planet some 4.5 billion years ago to create the Moon.

In research published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, a respected peer-reviewed scientific journal, academics used the immense computing power of the DiRAC supercomputer network to study just how a Moon as we know it today could come about in the wake of a collision between our planet and the mystery planet about half its size.

Simulations included multiple scenarios involving Theia, modeling outcomes based on the hypothesized planet’s size, spin (including the possibility of no spin), and various impact circumstances, including a head-on collision which would merge the two planets together, and another scenario in which Theia grazed the proto-Earth before continuing on its way through the universe.

The computer-aided modeling included tracking debris from the collision of the planets over a period equivalent to four Earth days.

Study lead author Sergio Ruiz-Bonilla, a PhD researcher at Durham University’s Institute for Computational Cosmology, cautioned against concluding that the modeling had found definitive proof of our Moon’s origin, but called the simulation’s ability to recreate a Moon-like object “an exciting place to continue looking.”

Coauthor Dr. Vincent Eke found the very little spin scenario’s creation of a trail of debris “incredibly fascinating,” and said that “there may well be several possible collisions that have yet to be investigated that could get us even closer to understanding just how the Moon formed in the first place.”

Researchers plan more simulations, playing with factors such mass, speed, and spin rate of both proto-Earth and Theia to observe the simulated impact and how it affects the creation of the Moon.

Ruiz-Bonilla et al.’s work serves to support the popular scientific theory that the Moon created after Earth was struck by Theia the mystery planet – named after the mother of Selene, Moon goddess of Greek mythology. It’s not the only theory, however, with others including the exciting possibility that an already formed Moon was ‘captured’ by the Earth’s gravitational field, or formed jointly with Earth from one protoplanetary cloud.

Analysis of lunar soil provided by NASA’s Apolo missions found it to be significantly different from that of Earth, appearing to give credence to the capture theory. In the Soviet Union, the theory of joint formation out of one cloud of particle matter was heavily investigated. In the early 2000s, veteran Russian Geochemist Dr. Erik Galimov offered another theory, proposing that Earth and its satellite may have been formed as a result of the fragmentation of common proplanetary accumulation of gas and dust.

Sourse: sputniknews.com

Supercomputer-Wielding Scientists Say Moon May Have Been Born as Earth Smashed Into Mystery Planet

0.00 (0%) 0 votes