By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept

Newzsnoop

All News in One place

  • World
    • Middle East
    • Africa
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • Americas
    • Us Today
  • Business
    • Small Business
    • Economy
    • DealBook
    • Energy & Environment
    • Media & Advertising
    • Your Money
  • Sports
    • Baseball
    • Golf
    • Pro-Football
      • College Football
    • Tennis
    • Hockey
    • Soccer
    • Pro-Basketball
      • College Basketball
  • Health
    • Well Blog
  • Science
    • Environment
    • Space & Cosmos
  • Culture & Lifestyle
    • Art & Design
      • Book Review
      • Dance
      • Opinion
      • Movies
      • Music
      • Television
      • Theater
    • Style
      • Dining & Wine
      • Fashion & Style
      • Love
      • N Magazine
    • Travel
  • Marketplace
    • Autos
    • Jobs
    • Real Estate
Reading: India’s lunar lander finds 1st evidence of a moonquake in decades
Share
Aa
Aa

Newzsnoop

All News in One place

  • World
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Science
  • Culture & Lifestyle
  • Marketplace
  • World
    • Middle East
    • Africa
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • Americas
    • Us Today
  • Business
    • Small Business
    • Economy
    • DealBook
    • Energy & Environment
    • Media & Advertising
    • Your Money
  • Sports
    • Baseball
    • Golf
    • Pro-Football
    • Tennis
    • Hockey
    • Soccer
    • Pro-Basketball
  • Health
    • Well Blog
  • Science
    • Environment
    • Space & Cosmos
  • Culture & Lifestyle
    • Art & Design
    • Style
    • Travel
  • Marketplace
    • Autos
    • Jobs
    • Real Estate
© 2022 Newzsnoop. All Rights Reserved.
Newzsnoop > News > Science > Space & Cosmos > India’s lunar lander finds 1st evidence of a moonquake in decades
Space & Cosmos

India’s lunar lander finds 1st evidence of a moonquake in decades

4 Min Read
Share
4 Min Read
SHARE

India’s moon rover may have just detected the first evidence of a “moonquake” since the 1970s.

The Instrument for Lunar Seismic Activity (ILSA) attached to the Vikram lander detected the seismic activity on the surface of the moon Aug. 26. Vikram landed on the moon’s south pole Aug. 23 as part of the Chandrayaan-3 mission — India’s first mission to the lunar surface.

If it’s confirmed, the moonquake — which the mission detected alongside other activity including the movements of India’s Pragyan rover — could give scientists a rare insight into the mysterious churning innards of Earth’s lunar companion.

Related: Why can we sometimes see the moon in the daytime?

The lander “has recorded an event, appearing to be a natural one, on August 26, 2023,” The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “The source of this event is under investigation.”

The Apollo lunar missions between 1969 and 1977 first detected seismic activity on the moon, which proved that the moon had a complex geological structure hidden deep within, rather than being uniformly rocky like the Martian moons Phobos and Deimos.

In recent years, advanced analysis tools and computer models have enabled scientists to sift through the data gathered by Apollo and other missions and build a clearer picture of the moon’s mysterious interior. A 2011 NASA study revealed that the moon’s core, much like Earth’s, was likely made up of fluid iron surrounding a dense, solid iron ball.

In May 2023, researchers used gravitational field data to confirm this iron core hypothesis, while also suggesting that blobs of the moon’s molten mantle could be separated from the rest, floating to the surface as clumps of iron and generating quakes as they went.

But these findings are just the beginning of the moon’s secrets. Magnetic fields are produced inside planetary bodies by the churning movement of material in planets’ electrically conductive molten cores. 

Today the interior of the non-magnetic moon is quite different from Earth’s magnetized innards — it’s dense and mostly frozen, containing only a small outer core region that is fluid and molten. Scientists believe that the moon’s insides cooled fairly quickly and evenly after it formed around 4.5 billion years ago, meaning it doesn’t have a strong magnetic field — and many scientists believe it never did.

How then, could some of the 3 billion-year-old rocks retrieved during NASA’s Apollo missions look like they were made inside a geomagnetic field powerful enough to rival Earth’s?

It is questions like these that the Chandrayaan-3 could help to answer. As the mission’s lander and rover are both solar-powered, they are currently in sleep mode until the moon exits its roughly 14-day night. When the sun hits the face of the lunar south pole again on Sept. 22, both tools stand poised to search for the answers.

You Might Also Like

When SpaceX’s Starship is ready to settle Mars, will we be? (op-ed)

BestGrowthStocks.com issues New Growth Report on Cosmos Health

NASA hopes humanoid robots can help us explore the moon and Mars

ASKAP telescope finds rare ribbon galaxy

Stunning image of Andromeda galaxy takes space photography prize of 2023

Admin September 19, 2023 September 19, 2023
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp
Previous Article Meet Alexandre Sarr, a potential top pick in the 2024 NBA draft — Andscape
Next Article The battle for Ukraine’s cultural gems

Latest News

How to Listen Well | Psychology Today
Well Blog
Fans criticise K-Pop idols taking up & failing Bada Lee’s Smoke dance challenge
Dance
Book Review: ‘Rome and Persia’ Adrian Goldsworthy and ‘Pax’ by Tom Holland
Book Review
LBCC starts construction on new $75 million Performing Arts Center – Press Telegram
Art & Design

You Might Also Like

Space & Cosmos

When SpaceX’s Starship is ready to settle Mars, will we be? (op-ed)

September 23, 2023
Space & Cosmos

BestGrowthStocks.com issues New Growth Report on Cosmos Health

September 23, 2023
Space & Cosmos

NASA hopes humanoid robots can help us explore the moon and Mars

September 23, 2023
Space & Cosmos

ASKAP telescope finds rare ribbon galaxy

September 23, 2023
Space & Cosmos

Stunning image of Andromeda galaxy takes space photography prize of 2023

September 23, 2023
Space & Cosmos

World Tourism Day: From Redmi Watch to Pebble Cosmos Luxe, 5 affordable smartwatches for your travels

September 23, 2023
Space & Cosmos

Water on moon could have formed due to high-energy electrons in Earth’s magnetic tail

September 23, 2023
Space & Cosmos

huge ancient cave art site discovered

September 23, 2023
Previous Next

DOWNLOAD APPS

© 2022 Newzsnoop. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer 
  • Terms and Conditions
Go to mobile version