STUDY BY TWO YALE UNIVERSITY RESEARCHERS SUGGEST - LUNAR SURFACE MAY CONTAIN ROCKS FROM VENUS
Venus experiences much
higher flux of asteroid impact compared to Earth, due to these impacts materials from surface of Venus could be ejected. Their analytical models
and simulations show that more than 0.7% of the ejected rocks from Venus could
have landed on Lunar surface. Their study indicate that the Venusian rock concentration
would be 0.2 ppm on Lunar regolith, if water on Venus was lost in last 3.5 Gyr. On the
other hand, if the water on Venus was lost 4 Gyr ago then the concentration of
Venusian material would be 0.3 ppm. So, by recovering the Venusian surface sample
and analysing them, we can determine when Venus lost its liquid oceans or
whether Venus ever had any liquid oceans.
Schematic of a vertical impact at the surface of a
terrestrial body. This example depicts the resulting processes from a 10 km s−1
projectile, including: spallation of near-surface material, which may reach the
escape velocity; the interference zone which reduces the maximum pressure
(Pmax) experienced by the rock; ejection of a vapor plume; rock undergoing
plastic deformation at pressures exceeding the Hugoniot Elastic Limit (HEL);
melting in the immediate vicinity of the impact; and Grady-Kipp fragmentation
of rock deeper into the target. At large depths, rock fragments into bigger
pieces due to reduced maximum pressure. Excavation flows clear out the region
which becomes the crater. The contours of constant pressure are hemispherical
below the impact, but sharply turn inwards at the interference zone. The x-axis
corresponds to horizontal distance from the impact site. Adapted from (Melosh
1984).
According to the
researchers analysing the existing Lunar samples from Apollo missions or samples
from any upcoming Lunar missions could provide us an answer.
Samuel Cabot, one of the authors
of the paper said, "Asteroids and comets slamming into Venus may have dislodged
as many as 10 billion rocks and sent them into an orbit that intersected with
Earth and Earth’s Moon. Some of these rocks will
eventually land on the Moon as Venusian meteorites.”
“Catastrophic impacts such as these only happen every hundred million
years or so — and occurred more frequently billions of years ago,” Cabot
further added.
“The Moon offers safe keeping for these ancient rocks. Anything from
Venus that landed on Earth is probably buried very deep, due to geological
activity. These rocks would be much better preserved on the Moon.”
Cabot further
said, “The Venusian atmosphere is so thick today that no rocks could possibly
escape after an impact with an asteroid or comet”.
According to Prof.
Laughlin, “There is a commensurability between the orbits of Venus and Earth
that provides a ready route for rocks blasted off Venus to travel to Earth’s
vicinity. The Moon’s gravity then
aids in sweeping up some of these Venusian arrivals”.
“An ancient fragment of Venus would contain a wealth of information,”
said Prof. Laughlin
Read More
Samuel H.C. Cabot &
Gregory Laughlin. 2020. Lunar Exploration as a Probe of Ancient Venus. PSJ, in
press; arXiv: 2010.02215


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