The Effects of Radiation Exposure on Moon Glass Across Billions of Years

The Effects of Radiation Exposure on Moon Glass Across Billions of Years

A team of materials scientists at Songshan Lake Materials ⁣Laboratory, working ⁣with colleagues from the China​ Academy of Space Technology and the Chinese Academy of​ Sciences, all ⁢in China, has found that billions of years of exposure to radiation has made glass⁢ on the moon harder.

In ⁣their paper ‌published in ‌the journal Science⁤ Advances, the group describes how⁣ they ⁢tested ‌samples ⁣of lunar‌ regolith⁢ brought to ​Earth ‌by China’s Chang’e-5‌ lunar lander and then treated the samples ‌to rejuvenate them for comparison purposes.

Humans have been making glass for approximately 4,000 ​years; nature,‌ on the⁢ other hand, has been doing it⁤ for billions of years.⁤ In this new effort, the research ⁢team studied glass that has been made naturally on the moon by meteoroids striking, and melting lunar regolith—some of it billions of years old.

Prior research has shown that the surface of the moon ⁣is ⁢littered with tiny ‍bits of glass, each of which has ​been subjected to ‌cosmic ​rays and radiation from the sun. In this ‌new ⁣effort, the research team‌ wanted to know what sort of impact such⁤ bombardment has⁣ had on the​ moon glass.

To find ⁢out, the researchers ⁢obtained five very ⁣tiny pieces of glass brought back by the⁤ Chang’e-5 lunar lander—each was no bigger around ⁢than the width of a human hair. Each was studied using a transmission electron microscope, which gave the team a view‍ of its structure. They also squeezed each sample to see how they reacted to force. Both of ⁢the study‍ methods gave the researchers a baseline to learn more about⁣ how aging has impacted the bits of glass.

2023-11-12 03:41:02
Link from phys.org

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