The moon has been secretly taking Earth's water from us for billions of years!
The moon has been secretly taking Earth's water from us for billions of years 1768
Researchers recently discovered the presence of water and ice particles on the surface of the "moon", and attributed this to collisions between the moon, asteroids and comets, which had already occurred on several occasions. . However, a recent study indicates that there is another source of this lunar water, which is our earth, or in a more precise sense, our Earth's atmosphere.
There may now be around 3,500 cubic kilometers (840 cubic miles) of surface permafrost, or liquid water on the moon's surface, due to the action of hydrogen and oxygen ions, which - scientists say - seep from the upper atmosphere of the planet, to unite with the surface of the moon, it accumulates over billions of years and forms the lunar water.

The Secret History of the Moon - 4K


As for the way the Moon draws water from the Earth, it is by drawing hydrogen and oxygen ions from the Earth to the surface of the Moon, when the Moon passes through the tail region of the Earth's magnetosphere ( the envelope or the magnetic field that you can see in the shape of a teardrop, surrounding the Earth affected by its magnetic field).
The moon passes through the tail of the mantle for 5 days of each lunar month, and during these days the solar wind pushes part of the mantle (maybe the place of the tail), penetrates it and breaks some magnetic field lines, leaving these lines connected to Earth on one side only. When the moon interferes with the broken tail, some of these broken bonds are repaired, and in doing so, some oxygen and hydrogen ions suddenly pass to the moon, having escaped from the surface of the earth's atmosphere during the breaking of the magnetic bonds.
And since there is no magnetosphere surrounding the moon, so when ions collide with its surface, permafrost forms naturally, and through a group of geological processes in the moon's soil, part of this frost can rush to the bottom of the moon's surface, and liquid water is formed.
The researchers believe there has been a slow buildup of these ions over billions of years, since the Late Heavy Bombardment (which is - as defined by Google - a period of time ranging from 4.1 to 3.8 billions of years, during which time many impact craters are believed to have formed on the Moon, Mercury, Venus, and Earth and Mars).
On the other hand, scientists have used gravitational data to closely examine the moon's polar regions and existing craters, and it has been found that there are rock fractures that are already capable of trapping permafrost, it is therefore possible that the water came from several sources and not from a single source, and it accumulated over the years. .




Water on the Moon
 
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https://www.arageek.com/news/some-of-the-moon-s-water-may-have-come-from-earth?fbclid=IwAR2ImjEkBjkYgR_8rrUXjAJ-ofJDyUvNCBSx8FWGDCLQpZaxiMRb-O7d65s