Giant collision may have formed Moon from Earth
Top Stories
- Rs 20L seized from Ajit Chandila relative's home, another ex-cricketer held
- India and China ask SRs to work on more border steps
- Can't charge man with rape over consensual sex even if marriage eludes: Supreme Court
- Saudi Arabian authorities refuse to accept new Indian passports
- FIR filed against Facebook for not discontinuing hate page

Moon could have indeed been born from the compositionally similar Earth, following a giant collision, new models have indicated.
The giant impact theory the idea that a catastrophic collision about 4.5 billion years ago between Earth and aprotoplanet about half Earth's size created a disk of molten rock, gas and debris that consolidated to form the Moon ¿ was first set forth in the mid-1970s.
In the 1980s, computer modelling of the physics of such a collision suggested the Moon would have formed mainly from the remnants of the pulverised foreign body, not from pieces of Earth, 'Earth' magazine reported.
However, newer analytical evidence has since shown that the Moon's chemical composition closely matches that of Earth's mantle.
Whereas all other known extraterrestrial bodies in the solar system today have different isotopic ratios than Earth, the Moon has almost identical isotopic ratios.
"This seemed to create a problem: the match of lunar and Earth material is too perfect," says William K Hartmann, senior scientist at the Planetary Science Institute (PSI).
The perfect isotopic match called the giant impact theory into question and suggested the Moon likely formed from Earth material, but how remained unknown.
Now, two new models suggest different ways a giant impactor could produce a Moon chemically similar to Earth.
In one model, Robin Canup, an astrophysicist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, suggests a larger impactor than previously considered possible, about the same size as the early Earth.
A collision with a similar-sized impactor would leave in its wake a mixture of debris from Earth and the impactor. After the planet consolidated, the remaining debris would produce a chemically similar Moon, Canup reported.
Although the collision of two similar-sized bodies, smaller than the modern Earth, was considered about 15 years ago, says Erik Asphaug, a planetary scientist at the University of California at Santa Cruz, the scenario was abandoned because the system resulted in too much angular momentum ¿ which didn't match today's Earth-Moon system.
... contd.
Editors’ Pick
- Former Ranji player among 3 more held
- Rajasthan Royals to file FIR against tainted trio
- If found guilty, BCCI to ask ICC to erase Sreesanth records
- Top cops among 42 named in death of blast accused
- Manmohan-Li talks: PM takes tough line on incursion issue
- Security forces blame Maoists, villagers say CoBRA man was killed in 'friendly fire'
- Travellers’ nightmare: Yellow fever vaccine stocks run out, production unit awaits repair
- Family of theft accused allege police torture
- IVF breakthrough can triple number of births: Scientists
- After Khalid’s death, Muslim leaders want govt to make Nimesh panel report public
- Meteoroid impact triggers bright flash on the moon
- Cobrapost sting: NABARD chief gives clean chit to co-operative banks


Lab-created human brain cells grow in mice
Mars Curiosity rover back to work after break
Tata group to launch Croma 3G tablets in next 2 weeks
Baboons understand numbers like humans




















