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Moon particles reveal more water content than earlier estimates, thanks to the sun, Chinese study suggests

  • Research led by Chinese Academy of Sciences looks at minerals brought back by the Chang’e 5 lunar mission from landing site
  • Water concentration at sampling site is at least 170 parts per million, most of it created by solar action, team says in paper

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The Chang’e-5 landing site on the moon. Photo: Chinese National Space Agency Lunar Exploration and Space Engineering Centre
There may be more water than previously thought at the landing site of China’s Chang’e 5 lunar explorer, a new study of rock samples brought back has found.
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And most of that water is from the sun, according to the study of lunar minerals led by researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

In December 2020, the Chang’e 5 probe brought back some 1.73kg (3.8lbs) of lunar soil to the Earth from a huge volcanic complex on the moon.

The Chinese mission not only marked the first robotic lunar sample return in nearly half a century – since the Soviet Union’s Luna 24 mission in 1976 – but also used its lander to report the first ever on-site evidence of water.

The water concentration at the sampling site was at least 170 parts per million (ppm), or 170 grams per tonne of lunar soil, the team said in their recently published paper in Nature Communications journal.

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The water, which mainly exists in the form of hydroxyl (OH) – a close chemical relative of free water (H2O) – forms as hydrogen ions in the solar wind bombard the moon’s surface and interact with oxygen atoms in the soil, explained paper co-author Li Xiongyao from the Institute of Geochemistry in China’s southern city of Guiyang.

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