Scientists have made a significant breakthrough in understanding where water on the Moon may be hiding. A recent analysis of Moon dust collected by China’s Chang’e-5 lander has revealed that a mineral within the dust contains an astonishing amount of water—so much so that water constitutes 41 percent of its weight. This mineral is similar to novograblenovite, a rare substance first identified in basaltic rock from Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula only a few years ago. Both the lunar and terrestrial minerals share the chemical formula (NH4)MgCl3·6H2O and have comparable crystalline structures.
The discovery of this water-rich mineral on the Moon is not only intriguing for what it tells us about lunar water but also for the clues it may provide about the Moon’s geological history and the origins of its water. The fact that we can study a similar mineral on Earth allows scientists to draw parallels and hypothesize about how water became trapped in the Moon’s surface materials.
Continue reading… “New Discovery Reveals Hidden Water on the Moon in Unusual Mineral”