articleScienceOct 18, 2012Closed access

Forming a Moon with an Earth-like Composition via a Giant Impact

Southwest Research Institute

PubMed
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Abstract

Forming the Moon from Earth It is thought that the Moon formed after a Mars-sized planet hit Earth about 4.5 billion years ago. Computer simulations of this event predict that the Moon was produced primarily from material from the impacting planet. However, the Moon has a similar composition to that of Earth, and the impacting planet would likely have had a different composition. Prior models assumed that the impact left the Earth-Moon system with the same angular momentum as it has today (see the Perspective by Halliday ). Ćuk and Stewart (p. 1047 , published online 17 October; see the cover) show that the angular momentum of the Earth-Moon system could have decreased by half after the Moon-forming impact,…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Astrobiology
  • Planet
  • Earth (classical element)
  • Mantle (geology)
  • Debris
  • Geology
  • Terrestrial planet
  • Collision
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