Fifty Year Old Moon Mystery Explained
ekarjala writes "This article from NewScientist.com explains that a "flash" on the moon's surface that (captured by an amateur photographer 50 years ago) was probably the result of a 20 meter asteroid hitting the moon's surface."
Here's a tip for Jeff Hecht, the article's author: If you write a piece about a photograph, you *must* link to a copy of the photograph. Mkay?
. stm
For everyone else, here it is:
http://iota.jhuapl.edu/stuart.jpg
And here's a much better story about it:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/2592075
The linked article doesn't have a pic of the impact they're talking about.
Here's one I found over at space.com.
A metor slamming into rock would easily produce enough energy as heat to produce a flash. (Many other things that produce light without oxygen - I *think* bioluminecence, plus glow sticks, but certainly things like nuclear reactions, which produce quite a bit of light without oxygen being involved. We sophisicated types refer to this as 'daylight'. ;) )
--
Evan
"$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
This is easier to answer than you might expect. When you have a rock hit the surface of the moon at a relative velocity of many kilometers per second, a good bit of the asteroid's kinetic energy gets converted very rapidly into heat. We're talking about energies on the order of hundreds of thousands of tons of TNT here. For a short period of time, part of the surface and some of the ejected matter will glow white hot, hence the 'flash'.
~Idarubicin
It's the terminator (best read with an Arnold Schwarzenegger accent :)
Here's where I saw that post first