Gravity field of the Moon

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Radial gravitational anomaly at the surface of the Moon.
Radial gravitational anomaly at the surface of the Moon.

The gravitational field of the Moon has been determined by the tracking of radio signals emitted by orbiting spacecraft. The principle used depends on the doppler effect, whereby the line-of-sight spacecraft acceleration can be measured by small shifts in frequency of the radio signal, and the measurement of the distance from the spacecraft to a station on Earth. Since the gravitational field of the Moon affects the orbit of a spacecraft, it is possible to use these tracking data to invert for gravitational anomalies. However, because of the Moon's synchronous rotation it is not possible to track spacecraft much over the limbs of the Moon, and the farside gravity field is thus only poorly characterized.

The major characteristic of the Moon's gravitational field is the presence of mascons, which are large positive gravitational anomalies associated with some of the giant impact basins. These anomalies greatly influence the orbit of spacecraft about the Moon, and an accurate gravitational model is necessary in the planning of both manned and unmanned missions. They were initially discoved by the analysis of Lunar Orbiter tracking data,[1] since pre-Apollo navigational tests were experiencing landing position errors much larger than mission specifications.

The origin of mascons are in part due to the presence of dense mare basaltic lava flows that fill some of the impact basins. However, lava flows by themselves can not explain the entirety of the gravitional signature, and uplift of the crust-mantle interface is required as well. Based on Lunar Prospector gravitational models, it has been suggested that some mascons exist that do not show evidence for mare basaltic volcanism.[2] It should be noted that the huge expanse of mare basaltic volcanism associated with Oceanus Procellarum does not possess a positive gravitational anomaly.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Paul Muller and William Sjogren (1968). "Masons: lunar mass concentrations". Science 161: 680-684. 
  2. ^ A. Konopliv, S. Asmar, E. Carranza, W. Sjogren, and D. Yuan (2001). "Recent gravity models as a result of the Lunar Prospector mission". Icarus 50: 1-18. 
See also
Solar system, natural satellite
The Moon  v  d  e 
General Calendar · Month · Moon in art and literature · Moon in mythology · Moon illusion · Lunar effect
Orbit Orbit of the Moon · Phases of the Moon · Solar eclipse · Lunar eclipse · Tides
Physical characteristics Internal structure · Gravity field · Topography · Magnetic field · Atmosphere
The lunar surface Selenography · Near side · Far side · Lunar mare · Impact crater · South Pole-Aitken basin · Shackleton (crater)· Ice · Peak of eternal light Space weathering · Transient lunar phenomenon
Lunar science Geology · Lunar geologic timescale · Giant impact hypothesis · Moon rocks · Lunar meteorites · KREEP · ALSEP · Lunar laser ranging · Late heavy bombardment
Exploration Exploration of the Moon · Project Apollo · Apollo Moon Landing hoax accusations · Robotic exploration · Future missions · Lunar colonization