Water on the moon: it’s been there all along
February 21, 2013

Called the “Genesis Rock,” this lunar sample collected during the Apollo 15 mission was thought to be a piece of the moon’s primordial crust. A University of Michigan researcher and colleagues report that traces of water were found in the rock. (Credit: NASA/Johnson Space Center)
Traces of water have been detected within the crystalline structure of mineral samples from the lunar highland upper crust obtained during the Apollo missions, according to a University of Michigan researcher and his colleagues.
The lunar highlands are thought to represent the original crust, crystallized from a magma ocean on a mostly molten early moon. The new findings indicate that the early moon was wet and that water there was not substantially lost during the moon’s formation.
The results seem to contradict the predominant lunar formation theory — that the moon was formed from debris generated during a giant impact between Earth and another planetary body, approximately the size of Mars, according to U-M’s Youxue Zhang and his colleagues.
Over the last five years, spacecraft observations and new lab measurements of Apollo lunar samples have overturned the long-held belief that the moon is bone-dry.
In 2008, laboratory measurement of Apollo lunar samples by ion microprobe detected indigenous hydrogen, inferred to be the water-related chemical species hydroxyl, in lunar volcanic glasses. In 2009, NASA’s Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing satellite, known as LCROSS, slammed into a permanently shadowed lunar crater and ejected a plume of material that was surprisingly rich in water ice.
Hydroxyls have also been detected in other volcanic rocks and in the lunar regolith, the layer of fine powder and rock fragments that coats the lunar surface. Hydroxyls, which consist of one atom of hydrogen and one of oxygen, were also detected in the lunar anorthosite study reported in Nature Geoscience.
In the latest work, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy was used to analyze the water content in grains of plagioclase feldspar from lunar anorthosites, highland rocks composed of more than 90 percent plagioclase. The bright-colored highlands rocks are thought to have formed early in the moon’s history when plagioclase crystallized from a magma ocean and floated to the surface.
The infrared spectroscopy work, which was conducted at Zhang’s U-M lab and co-author Anne H. Peslier’s lab, detected about 6 parts per million of water in the lunar anorthosites.
“The surprise discovery of this work is that in lunar rocks, even in nominally water-free minerals such as plagioclase feldspar, the water content can be detected,” said Zhang, James R. O’Neil Collegiate Professor of Geological Sciences.
“It’s not ‘liquid’ water that was measured during these studies but hydroxyl groups distributed within the mineral grain,” said Notre Dame’s Hui. “We are able to detect those hydroxyl groups in the crystalline structure of the Apollo samples.”
The hydroxyl groups the team detected are evidence that the lunar interior contained significant water during the moon’s early molten state, before the crust solidified, and may have played a key role in the development of lunar basalts. “The presence of water,” said Hui, “could imply a more prolonged solidification of the lunar magma ocean than the once-popular anhydrous moon scenario suggests.”
The researchers analyzed grains from ferroan anorthosites 15415 and 60015, as well as troctolite 76535. Ferroan anorthosite 15415 is one the best known rocks of the Apollo collection and is popularly called the Genesis Rock because the astronauts thought they had a piece of the moon’s primordial crust. It was collected on the rim of Apur Crater during the Apollo 15 mission.
The work was supported by NASA.
Comments (11)
by Keith
Or just maybe we are reading the evidence all wrong and in fact the hydroxyl is forming within the rock over millions of years?
by Bri
At six parts per million your not talking about a lot of water. The polar craters are the best place to obtain water. This research is mainly helpful in terms of planetary body formation. It indicates the amount of water present on the early earth when the impact occured. The vast majority of which woukd have been in the form of steam trapped in the consolidated material. The early earth itself probably had received most of it’s water by then, otherwise the moon would have more water from cometary deposition.
by SmartAndSober
Wait until matter-transfusion becomes reality, then we will have unlimited amount of *any element* we want.
Imagine what you can do if you can change the number of protons in a nucleus, therefore change the element of the atom (a more formal name for such method of manufacturing will be (I guess) femto-manufacturing or perhaps atto-manufacturing).
by SmartAndSober
I mean, necessities of life (for MOSHs and near-MOSHs) such as water, air and food can be synthesized this way. Femto-manufacturing and atto-manufacturing will be able to produce materials that are impossible to be created with nanotechnology.
I personally prefer a much more (in almost every way) efficient life as a uploadee. A sufficiently miniaturized computing structure the size of a sand grain (perhaps attotechnological or even more miniaturized) can contain several human uploadees, with their (optional) VR mind-supporting systems.
by SmartAndSober
Professor Hugo de Garis, in many talks and on his blog (profhugodegaris.wordpress.com) mentioned his concept of SIPI (Search for Infra-Particle Intelligence).
He believe that any sufficiently old alien civilizations will become, through their own technology, Infra-Particle-sized beings.
Instead of only searching for existing infra-particle intelligences, I believe we should also strive to become such intelligences.
The Solar System can hold a much larger population if we become IPI, than the population that is possible if we stay macroscopic.
Larger population also means greater overall intelligence (of our whole civilization).
by SmartAndSober
Regarding miniaturization of sentient beings, I believe that the Planck-Length, the smallest meaningful distance in modern physics, is not the bottom limit of how small computing structures can be miniaturized.
The history of Science had, repetitively, shown us that the known limits at any time are almost certainly breakable.
The theory of relativity was once considered to be false. Heavier-than-air flight was once considered to be impossible. Telephone was once considered to have no commercial value. All of these beliefs are now broken.
Perhaps in the future we will discover how to miniaturize beyond the Planck-scale. And, from the perspective of such miniaturized beings, the resource available in the universe is almost infinite.
Perhaps true infinity lie not only in expansion out of this Universe, but also in miniaturizing ourselves.
by hal
yep, and when the energy dam breaks i can type in the code and make an orange or tomato. Exact flavor will need to be resolved, but a Porche will be a Porche, Wall-E
by matt
why did I know there was water on the moon before the guys with rocket ships? how was there any doubt is my real question…
by SmartAndSober
I believe that you had been confused by the name “Sea of Tranquillity”.
The dark areas of the Moon’s near side (Moon is tidally locked, therefore always faces Earth with one side) are commonly known as ‘Mares’ or “seas’.
For example, Aldrin and Armstrong, on July 20, 1969, landed on Mare Tranquillitatis (or the Sea of Tranquillity).
Despite their names, they are not seas. Rather they are basaltic plains formed by volcanic eruptions.
by Gorden Russell
It will take a lot of robots a lot of time to recover these traces of water. But when robots can print up more robots, they will multiply like bacteria in a Petri plate. Once they get started, there will be a billion robots on the moon in no time at all.
by SmartAndSober
A great challenge, when the first colonists on Moon expand their infrastructure, would be finding and extracting water.
This new discovery shall greatly facilitate the colonists’ survival and long term prosperity.