Litcius/Paper detail

On the reachability and genesis of water ice on the Moon

Tathagata Chakraborty, T. H. Syed, Essam Heggy, Deepak Putrevu, Upama Dutta

2024ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Understanding the reachability of water ice by future in-situ experiments near the lunar poles is crucial for supporting growing exploration plans and constraining the uncertainties on its genesis and distribution. To achieve this objective, we perform a thorough three-dimensional mapping of the distribution of water ice in the lunar polar regions (70° onward), integrating radar, optical, and neutron detector observations from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter mission (LRO). Our analysis reveals ∼5-to-8-fold larger expanse of subsurface water ice (∼1-3 m depth) compared to surface water ice (up to 1 m depth) for the north and south poles, respectively. Our investigation cannot rule out the possibility of deep-seated water ice deposits in the lunar poles that remains beyond the detection capabilities of existing instruments on LRO. Moreover, we find that the extent of water ice in the northern polar region (∼1100 ± 74 km2) is twice that in the southern polar region (∼562 ± 54 km2). Our mapping also suggests that the dichotomous latitudinal distribution and the antipodal longitudinal distribution of water ice are likely driven by Mare volcanism and preferential cratering. We provide additional evidence that outgassing during Imbrian volcanism was probably the primary source of subsurface water ice in the lunar poles, which favors larger expanse over meteoritic sources.

Topics & Concepts

GeologyWater icePolarOutgassingImpact craterRegolithIce sheetIce divideVolcanismPolar wanderAstrobiologyEarth scienceGeomorphologyGeophysicsCryosphereSea ice thicknessPaleontologySea iceTectonicsClimatologyPaleomagnetismAstronomyOrganic chemistryChemistryPhysicsPlanetary Science and ExplorationAstro and Planetary ScienceScientific Research and Discoveries