JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2017

講演情報

[JJ] 口頭発表

セッション記号 P (宇宙惑星科学) » P-PS 惑星科学

[P-PS08] [JJ] 月の科学と探査

2017年5月20日(土) 13:45 〜 15:15 102 (国際会議場 1F)

コンビーナ:長岡 央(早稲田大学理工学術院総合研究所)、諸田 智克(名古屋大学大学院環境学研究科)、西野 真木(名古屋大学宇宙地球環境研究所)、本田 親寿(会津大学)、座長:鹿山 雅裕(東北大学大学院理学研究科地学専攻)、座長:川村 太一(国立天文台)

14:30 〜 14:45

[PPS08-16] Moganite in lunar meteorite, Northwest Africa 773 clan: Trace of H2O Ice in the Moon’s Subsurface

*鹿山 雅裕1,2富岡 尚敬3大谷 栄治1瀬戸 雄介4長岡 央5Götze Jens6三宅 亮7小澤 信1関根 利守8,9宮原 正明8留岡 和重4松本 恵4庄田 直起4平尾 直久10 (1.東北大学大学院理学研究科地学専攻、2.東北大学学際科学フロンティア研究所新領域創成研究部、3.海洋研究開発機構高知コア研究所、4.神戸大学大学院理学研究科惑星学専攻、5.早稲田大学先進理工学部、6.TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Institut für Mineralogie、7.京都大学大学院理学研究科地球惑星学専攻地質学鉱物学教室、8.広島大学大学院理学研究科地球惑星システム学専攻、9.Center for High Pressure Science and Technology Advanced Research、10.高輝度光科学研究センター)

キーワード:月隕石、月、地下水、氷

Lunar water locally concentrates as a result of the migration of H2O molecules on the sunlit surface towards the colder regions. The molecular water is subsequently cold-trapped as ice on the permanently shadowed regions, the poles and theoretically Moon’s subsurface. Although a few trace of subsurface H2O has been observed by remote sensing spectrometers (e.g., LCROSS), it has not been reported in the Apollo and Luna samples and lunar meteorites yet. In this study, lunar meteorites, the Northwest Africa (NWA) 773 clan, were investigated and thereby moganite, a monoclinic SiO2 phase precipitated from alkaline fluids, was discovered by various microanalyses. A formation process of this lunar moganite was also interpret to evaluate origin of the Moon’s subsurface H2O.
Lunar meteorites of the NWA 773 clan were selected for Raman spectroscopy, electron microscopies and synchrotron X-ray diffraction (SR-XRD). The KREEP-like NWA 773 clan commonly consists of gabbroic and/or basaltic clasts.
Silica occurred as anhedral micrograins between the constituent minerals in the lunar meteorite. Raman spectra of the silica micrograins exhibited pronounced peaks at 128, 141, 217 and 503 cm−1, which corresponded to those of moganite. Coesite Raman peaks were also identified together with the moganite signature. Raman intensity mapping revealed that the silica micrograins contain abundant moganite in its core, surrounded by coesite. SR-XRD of several silica micrograins also confirmed moganite and coesite. Transmission electron microscopy clarified that the silica micrograins consist of nanocrystalline particles with an average radius of 4.5 nm. Most of the SiO2 nanoparticles were identified as moganite by selected area electron diffraction (SAED) patterns. Moganite was accompanied by small amounts of coesite, according to SAED analyses of the SiO2 nanoparticles.
Moganite-bearing silica micrograins in the NWA 773 clan precipitated from lunar alkaline fluids rather than terrestrial weathering for the following reasons: (1) Occurrence only in a part of the NWA 773 clan. (2) Moganite surrounded by the coesite rim. (3) High moganite content contradicting reduced content to <20 wt% under dry desert condition over terrestrial age.
A formation process for lunar moganite can be explained as follows. A host gabbroic and basaltic rock of the NWA 773 crystallised within the Procellarum KREEP Terrene (PKT). Subsequently, carbonaceous-chondrite collisions occurred on the surface of the PKT, followed by ejection of the host rock due to the impact events. The alkaline water delivered by the carbonaceous chondrite was captured as a fluid during the brecciation on the impact basin. Below the freezing point, this fluid got cold-trapped as H2O ice in the subsurface. Simultaneously, the moganite-rich silica micrograins precipitated from the captured alkaline fluid on the sunlit surface. The NWA 773 clan was launched from the PKT by the latest impact event, thus producing transformations to coesite from moganite.