Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5487253 | Icarus | 2017 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
We investigate the density and spatial distribution of the H2 exosphere of the Moon assuming various source mechanisms. Owing to its low mass, escape is non-negligible for H2. For high-energy source mechanisms, a high percentage of the released molecules escape lunar gravity. Thus, the H2 spatial distribution for high-energy release processes reflects the spatial distribution of the source. For low energy release mechanisms, the escape rate decreases and the H2 redistributes itself predominantly to reflect a thermally accommodated exosphere. However, a small dependence on the spatial distribution of the source is superimposed on the thermally accommodated distribution in model simulations, where density is locally enhanced near regions of higher source rate. For an exosphere accommodated to the local surface temperature, a source rate of 2.2 g sâ1 is required to produce a steady state density at high latitude of 1200 cmâ3. Greater source rates are required to produce the same density for more energetic release mechanisms. Physical sputtering by solar wind and direct delivery of H2 through micrometeoroid bombardment can be ruled out as mechanisms for producing and liberating H2 into the lunar exosphere. Chemical sputtering by the solar wind is the most plausible as a source mechanism and would require 10-50% of the solar wind H+ inventory to be converted to H2 to account for the observations.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Space and Planetary Science
Authors
Dana M. Hurley, Jason C. Cook, Kurt D. Retherford, Thomas Greathouse, G. Randall Gladstone, Kathleen Mandt, Cesare Grava, David Kaufmann, Amanda Hendrix, Paul D. Feldman, Wayne Pryor, Angela Stickle, Rosemary M. Killen, S. Alan Stern,