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Widespread impact-generated porosity in early planetary crusts

Space Sciences

Widespread impact-generated porosity in early planetary crusts

S. E. Wiggins, B. C. Johnson, et al.

NASA's GRAIL mission unveiled surprising porosity in the lunar crust, revealing how large impacts can significantly enhance this porosity far beyond previous predictions. This research by Sean E. Wiggins, Brandon C. Johnson, Gareth S. Collins, H. Jay Melosh, and Simone Marchi explores the implications for early planetary environments and fluid circulation.... show more
Abstract
NASA's Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) spacecraft revealed the crust of the Moon is highly porous, with ~4% porosity at 20 km deep. The deep lying porosity discovered by GRAIL has been difficult to explain, with most current models only able to explain high porosity near the lunar surface (first few kilometers) or inside complex craters. Using hydrocode routines we simulated fracturing and generation of porosity by large impacts in lunar, martian, and Earth crust. Our simulations indicate impacts that produce 100–1000 km scale basins alone are capable of producing all observed porosity within the lunar crust. Simulations under the higher surface gravity of Mars and Earth suggest basin forming impacts can be a primary source of porosity and fracturing of ancient planetary crusts. Thus, we show that impacts could have supported widespread crustal fluid circulation, with important implications for subsurface habitable environments on early Earth and Mars.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Aug 16, 2022
Authors
Sean E. Wiggins, Brandon C. Johnson, Gareth S. Collins, H. Jay Melosh, Simone Marchi
Tags
NASA
GRAIL mission
lunar crust
porosity
impacts
simulations
subsurface fluid circulation
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