The (7)Be, (22)Na, (26)Al, (44)Ti, (46)SC, (48)V (51)Cr, (54)Mn, (56)Co, (57)Co, (57)CO, (40)K, (238)U, and (232)Th were measured in lunar fines and portions of three rocks. Major production of cosmogenic radionuclides is due to solar protons, thus their concentrations are far different than those in meteorites. Surface exposures of the rocks and fines are long compared with the 0.74 million year half-life of (26)Al. Lunar fines show substantially higher concentrations of low energy reaction products. The ratios of thorium to uranium are extremely constant at 3.8, which indicates very little geochemical differentiation and are in good agreement with a common nucleosynthesis for lunar and earth materials.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.167.3918.577 | DOI Listing |
Anat Rec
November 2002
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, University of South Carolina, Columbia 29208, USA.
Interplanetary missions to collect pristine Martian surface samples for analysis of organic molecules, and to search for evidence of life, are in the planning phases. The only extraterrestrial samples currently on Earth are lunar dust and rocks, brought back by the Apollo (U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlass objects in the fines from the Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 missions are shown, by two-beam reflection interferometry, to have been subject to shock at temperatures below the melting or softening point of the glass. Possible causes for the glass fragmentation are discussed.
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