Molten Core Inside The Moon? 47
beggs writes: "The Times (free reg et al.) is running an article about the possibility of a molten core inside the moon and that this, if confirmed may lend support the the theory that the moon is the child of a violent collision between mother earth and some other heavenly body in the distance past."
Even if it does have a molten core (Score:3, Informative)
Aren't there easier tests? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Aren't there easier tests? (Score:2)
Re:Aren't there easier tests? (Score:1)
Re:Aren't there easier tests? (Score:2)
Re:Aren't there easier tests? (Score:1)
Silly scientists.. (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Silly scientists.. (Score:3, Funny)
Now we know that it also has a rich-'n-creamy center! Mmmmmm... I'm hopping it's nougat, topped with caramel.
Re:Silly scientists.. (Score:2)
Good with fondue.
Energy (Score:2, Interesting)
Might be worth looking at.
Re:Energy (Score:2)
BTW... love the sig.
Re:Energy (Score:2)
Yeah, this would be the Holy Grail of power sources for a moon colony. There would be a lot of energy down there, much more than we could use.
The only problem I could see is the same one which stops us from using geothermal effectively here; we can't drill deep enough to get a large enough temperature differential to make it worthwhile. Perhaps some engineer could elaborate on this...
Re:Energy (Score:3, Insightful)
Solar would be better.
Especially with no atmosphere or weather to degrade the incoming sunlight, solar cells work quite well.
Geothermal is a pain to work with under the best of circumstances (you can only build a large-scale plant (no small power sources)), and even if the moon has an energy-producing core (tidally kneaded or (like Earth's) radioisotope-powered), the amount of energy flowing out of it is small compared to Earth's (no volcanism or rapidly convecting mantle). This means that the yield from geothermal on the moon will under the best of conditions be much lower than on Earth.
Given that solar power is so convenient, I don't see any strong reason to use geothermal. Power storage for half a month isn't *that* hard, and if you need enough power to make storage impractical, you can put big mylar mirrors in orbit around the moon to reflect enough sunlight to supply your photocells (probably cheaper than a power cable around the equator).
Re:Energy (Score:2)
life on our own moon (Score:1)
Re:life on our own moon (Score:1)
Geothermal maybe? (Score:2)
The way he says it... (Score:1)
Its not The Times (Score:2)
Re:Its not The Times (Score:1)
No way (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No way (Score:1)
Re:No way (Score:2, Informative)
(no, it doesn't have to be necessarily a chunk, but most likely a big scoop pf molten rock... from when the earth was in a molten state.)
Did you really think we thought a large object hit Earth, and ejected a perfectly spherical rock?
Well thats how everything started. Basically huge chunks of rock slammed together to make the planets, and over time, smaller ones filled in the gaps, the pressure created a molten core, and the core smoothed everything out.
Re:No way (Score:3, Interesting)
In fact, the original poster is correct: if the Moon formed in a giant impact, it appears that it should be almost all rock akin to Earth's mantle. The iron and other metallic elements would have sunk into the interior of the Earth, being lost to the disk of debris what would go on to form the Moon.
Re:No way (Score:2, Interesting)
The earth IS in a molten state as we speak! There's a little crust on the outside, but, proportionally speaking, it's many many times thinner than the shell of an egg. The earth could be hit by a large celestial object TODAY, (even a 200-mile wide blob of frozen ammonium, which is VERY cold) and tomorrow you wouldn't be able to tell that the earth had EVER had a crust. It's not that the force of the impact would melt the entire crust, it's just that it would break the shell and let all the hot insides come out and melt the crust.
Re:No way (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, this is true... it also has nothing to do with how the moon formed. Angular momentum transfer from tidal forces automatically forces an orbiting body into just such a configuration. It's called being tidally locked. This same process has caused the earth's rotation to slow, and to increase the average radius of the moon's orbit.
Doug
Re:No way (Score:1)
How does one get a molten core from just a rock?
The molten core of the earch IS rock - molten rock! i.e. that stuff you see coming out of a volcano is very hot, and hence liquid, ROCK. That comprises the major part of the earth's mass.
non sequitir (Score:1)
The Most Important Question (Score:1)
(Let's just hope that some owl doesn't come and take two licks and bite right to the core, forever leaving the problem unanswered)