3.9 Review

Volatile interactions with the lunar surface

Journal

GEOCHEMISTRY
Volume 82, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemer.2021.125858

Keywords

Moon; Volatiles; Impacts; Lunar volcanism; Solar wind; PSR; Permanent shadow; Lunar poles; Lunar exosphere; Water; Hydroxyl; Carbon dioxide; Methane

Funding

  1. NASA Solar System Exploration Virtual Institute [80NSSC19K0802]
  2. NASA Lunar Reconnaissance Observer Project
  3. NASA SSERVI [80NSSC20M0027]
  4. KM: NASA
  5. Solar System Exploration Virtual Institute Grant [80NSSC19K0802]
  6. Jet Propulsion Laboratory
  7. NASA ANGSA
  8. NASA LRO Diviner Project
  9. USRA/NASA Post-Doctoral Fellowship Program
  10. NASA LRO Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter
  11. [80NSSC19M021]
  12. [80NSSC20M0020]

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The Moon is generally lacking volatile elements, including water. Recent discoveries have revealed a more complex volatile environment than previously believed, with unexpected chemical reactions and issues regarding volatile transport.
The Moon is generally depleted in volatile elements and this depletion extends to the surface where the most abundant mineral, anorthite, features <6 ppm H2O. Presumably the other nominally anhydrous minerals that dominate the mineral composition of the global surface-olivine and pyroxene-are similarly depleted in water and other volatiles. Thus the Moon is tabula rasa for the study of volatiles introduced in the wake of its origin. Since the formation of the last major basin (Orientale), volatiles from the solar wind, from impactors of all sizes, and from volatiles expelled from the interior during volcanic eruptions have all interacted with the lunar surface, leaving a volatile record that can be used to understand the processes that enable processing, transport, sequestration, and loss of volatiles from the lunar system. Recent discoveries have shown the lunar system to be complex, featuring emerging recognition of chemistry unanticipated from the Apollo era, confounding issues regarding transport of volatiles to the lunar poles, the role of the lunar regolith as a sink for volatiles, and the potential for active volatile dynamics in the polar cold traps. While much has been learned since the overturn of the Moon is dry paradigm by innovative sample and spacecraft measurements, the data point to a more complex lunar volatile environment than is currently perceived.

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