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A South Pole-Aitken impact origin of the lunar compositional asymmetry.

Matt J JonesAlexander J EvansBrandon C JohnsonMatthew B WellerJeffrey C Andrews-HannaSonia M TikooJames T Keane
Published in: Science advances (2022)
The formation of the largest and most ancient lunar impact basin, South Pole-Aitken (SPA), was a defining event in the Moon's evolution. Using numerical simulations, we show that widespread mantle heating from the SPA impact can catalyze the formation of the long-lived nearside-farside lunar asymmetry in incompatible elements and surface volcanic deposits, which has remained unexplained since its discovery in the Apollo era. The impact-induced heat drives hemisphere-scale mantle convection, which would sequester Th- and Ti-rich lunar magma ocean cumulates in the nearside hemisphere within a few hundred million years if they remain immediately beneath the lunar crust at the time of the SPA impact. A warm initial upper mantle facilitates generation of a pronounced compositional asymmetry consistent with the observed lunar asymmetry.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • oxidative stress
  • molecular dynamics
  • water quality