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Pictograph of the Earth-Moon formation shown here on its side. - Image credit: Southwest Research Institute

Pictograph of the Earth-Moon formation shown here on its side. - Image credit: Southwest Research Institute

Planetary

Lunar Scientists Produce New Model for Earth/Moon Formation

New model reconciles the Moon’s Earth-like composition with the giant impact theory of formation

SAN ANTONIO, Texas — A new model of how the Earth’s moon formed is challenging the idea that the early Earth was struck by a Mars-sized body, ejecting material that would become the moon. The new research, by Dr. Robin M. Canup of the Southwest Research Institute, indicates that both bodies in the collision were four to five times the mass of Mars, roughly half the mass of today’s Earth.

After colliding once, the two similar-sized bodies re-collided and then merged briefly before separating into an early Earth surrounded by a disk of material that would coalesce into the Moon. The re-collision and merging left the two bodies with the similar chemical compositions seen today. One of the challenges to longstanding theory of the collision is that it likely would have left the Earth and Moon with different chemical compositions.

The giant impact hypothesis has been a widely accepted theory for how the Earth-Moon system formed. In the giant impact scenario, the Moon forms from debris ejected into an Earth-orbiting disk by the collision of a smaller proto-planet with the early Earth. Earlier models found that most or much of the disk material would have originated from the Mars-sized impacting body, whose composition likely would have differed substantially from that of Earth.

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 — For full image and caption Click to Enlarge

The new model by Southwest Research Institute (SwRI), motivated by accompanying work by others on the early dynamical history of the Moon, accounts for this similarity in composition while also yielding an appropriate mass for Earth and Moon.

The new models developed by Dr. Robin M. Canup, an associate vice president in the SwRI Space Science and Engineering Division, and funded by the NASA Lunar Science Institute, suggest that the early Earth and Moon were created by the collision of much larger impactors than were previously considered.

In the new simulations, both the impactor and the target are about 4 to 5 times the mass of Mars. The near symmetry of the collision causes the disk’s composition to be extremely similar to that of the final planet’s mantle over a relatively broad range of impact angles and speeds, consistent with the Earth-Moon compositional similarities.

The new impacts produce an Earth that is rotating 2 to 2.5 times faster than implied by the current angular momentum of the Earth-Moon system, which is contained in both the Earth’s rotation and the Moon’s orbit.

However, in an accompanying paper in Science, Dr. Matija Ćuk, SETI Institute, and Dr. Sarah T. Stewart, Harvard University, show that a resonant interaction between the early Moon and the Sun — known as the evection resonance — could have decreased the angular momentum of the Earth-Moon system by this amount soon after the Moon-forming impact.

“By allowing for a much higher initial angular momentum for the Earth-Moon system, the Ćuk and Stewart work allows for impacts that for the first time can directly produce an appropriately massive disk with a composition equal to that of the planet’s mantle,” says Canup.

In addition to the impacts identified in Canup’s paper, Ćuk and Stewart show that impacts involving a much smaller, high-velocity impactor colliding into a target that is rotating very rapidly due to a prior impact can also produce a disk-planet system with similar compositions.

“The ultimate likelihood of each impact scenario will need to be assessed by improved models of terrestrial planet formation, as well as by a better understanding of the conditions required for the evection resonance mechanism,” adds Canup.

Canup used smoothed-particle hydrodynamics (SPH) to simulate the colliding planetary objects using 300,000 discrete particles whose individual thermodynamic and gravitational interactions were tracked with time.

The paper, “Forming a Moon with an Earth-like composition via a Giant Impact,” by R.M Canup, was published Oct. 17, 2012,

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