 It is not raining on the Moon, but it does seem to be getting wetter and wetter.For  decades, the prevailing view of the Moon was that it was dry. Then, two  years ago, a National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) probe  crashed into a deep crater near the Moon's south pole and confirmed  large amounts of water ice within the shadows. Meanwhile, measurements  by an orbiting Indian spacecraft suggested that a veneer of water,  generated by the bombardment of solar wind particles, covered much of  the Moon's surface. Now, scientists analysing tiny fragments of hardened  lava from long-ago lunar eruptions report that the fragments contain  about as much water as similar magmas on Earth, meaning there is plenty  of water inside the Moon too.
It is not raining on the Moon, but it does seem to be getting wetter and wetter.For  decades, the prevailing view of the Moon was that it was dry. Then, two  years ago, a National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) probe  crashed into a deep crater near the Moon's south pole and confirmed  large amounts of water ice within the shadows. Meanwhile, measurements  by an orbiting Indian spacecraft suggested that a veneer of water,  generated by the bombardment of solar wind particles, covered much of  the Moon's surface. Now, scientists analysing tiny fragments of hardened  lava from long-ago lunar eruptions report that the fragments contain  about as much water as similar magmas on Earth, meaning there is plenty  of water inside the Moon too. “I  have to admit, we were a little surprised,” said Erik H. Hauri, a staff  scientist in geochemistry at the Carnegie Institution of Washington and  lead author of a paper published on May 26 in the journal Science. 
Dr.  Hauri's surprise comes despite the fact that he and several of his  co-authors predicted three years ago that they would find that much  water. Back then, they looked at tiny beads of volcanic glass — the  beads were about the size of periods in printed text — in soil brought  back by Apollo astronauts. The beads contained water, but not a lot a  lot of it: a maximum of 46 parts per million — or 0.0046 per cent water.  Their models suggested that 95 per cent of the water originally in the  hot magma escaped as it cooled. Dr. Hauri acknowledged that the  extrapolation was less than ironclad. The new work started when another  member of the research team, Alberto E. Saal, a professor of geological  sciences at Brown University, handed a vial of Moon dirt to Thomas  Weinreich, a Brown freshman, and asked him to sift through it for  interesting particles.
As Mr. Weinreich laboriously  examined the soil, grain by grain, under a microscope, he found, mixed  among the glass beads, some clear crystals; some of those crystals  contained a tiny amount of glass.
The crystals, made  of the mineral olivine, prevented any of the water in the enclosed glass  from escaping. The amount of water in the trapped glass was 20 to 100  times what had been previously measured in the glass beads, comparable  to the water content of some Earth magmas. “There is a reservoir down  there in the Moon that has the same concentration of water as some  reservoirs in the upper mantle of Earth,” Dr. Saal said. “That's for  sure.” 
What is much less certain is how large the  underground water-rich reservoir might be. Last year, researchers led by  Zachary D. Sharp of the University of New Mexico came to the exact  opposite conclusion. Based on concentrations of chlorine isotopes in  lunar rocks, they concluded that the rocks must have hardened out of  lava that contained almost no water. But if the interior of the Moon  turns out to contain considerable water, then the ice at the bottom of  lunar craters may have come from volcanic eruptions rather than comet  impacts. 
The finding would also throw a new wrinkle  into explanations of how the Moon formed in the aftermath of a collision  between the Earth and a Mars-size interloper about 4.6 billion years  ago. But scientists have not been able to fully explain what makes up  the Moon, and the water finding potentially adds another mystery. 
Courtesy : The Hindu
 
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