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The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010
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The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

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Page 1: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

The Search for a Lunar Dynamo

Ian Garrick-Bethell

Brown University

NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010

Page 2: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

The utility of planetary magnetism

Earth Mars

Ganymede Mercury

Moon Asteroids(in order of decreasing radius)

Page 3: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

The utility of planetary magnetism

Earth Mars

Ganymede Mercury

Moon Asteroids(in order of decreasing radius)

Page 4: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

What is the structure of the Moon?

Core evidence: seismic, moment of inertia, magnetic induction, and wobble.

Rich in heat producing elements

Page 5: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Early views of the Moon

Pre-Apollo era: Hot Moon vs. Cold Moon

Harold Urey: primitive chondritic object

Others (e.g Shoemaker): experienced melting

Credit: Bill Hartmann

Page 6: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

In Search of a Lunar Dynamo

Luna 1, January 2, 1959Luna 2

September 12, 1959

S. DolginovMagnetometer Principal Investigator

Result: lunar dipole field at least ~10,000 weaker than the Earth’s

Page 7: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Hot Moon

• Surveyor 5 spacecraft (1967) detected basalt.

• Apollo missions directly sampled and confirmed the volcanic origin for the lunar mare.

• The Moon had experienced at least some melting.

Surveyor 3

Page 8: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Crustal magnetism discovered

Russell et al. 1974Apollo 15 and 16 subsatellites

Page 9: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Crustal magnetism discovered

Apollo 16 magnetometerApollo 12 magnetometer

Page 10: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Does crustal magnetism = dynamo?

From Mark Wieczorek’s 2009 AGU Talk

Page 11: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

The lunar rock magnetic record

Wieczorek, et al. (2006) & Cisowski and Fuller (1987)

Modern Earth field (~ 50 μT)

Page 12: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Modern Earth field (~ 50 μT)?

Wieczorek, et al. (2006) & Cisowski and Fuller (1987)

The lunar rock magnetic record

Page 13: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

What we know and don’t know• It is clear that fields existed on Moon:

– Crustal remanence. – Paleomagnetic record.

• It is not clear whether the fields are from a dynamo or impact processes.– Doell et al. (1970): transient impact-

generated fields could magnetize rocks as a shock wave passes through them: “shock magnetized.”

Page 14: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Rock magnetic approach

• We seek rocks with ages > 4.0 Ga.

• But we also carefully select a rock with favorable petrologic history.

Page 15: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

We started looking at a lot of old rocks

Page 16: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

76535 – Pristine Troctolite

• Age: 4.2-4.3 Ga

• Argon age

• Plutonic

• No shock effects

1 mm

Page 17: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Why the troctolite is so important• 1) Lack of detectable shock features: remanence

is less likely due to shock effects– Restricts impact related processes.

• 2) Cooling history is well constrained: slow cooling history implies any remanence is from long-lived fields– Further restricts impact related processes.

• 3) It is very old. It is somewhat easier to accept a core dynamo at early times.

Page 18: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Measurements

• Thermal demagnetization is the gold standard, but:

• It is destructive, rocks frequently alter (Lawrence et al. 2008).

• Our approach: first perform nondestructive AF demagnetization to understand the samples, and then if desirable, perform thermal.

Page 19: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Alternating Field Demagnetization

z

x

y

Magnetization vectorDemag. Step 1

Sample

Ideally, trends to the origin

Demag. Step 2

Page 20: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

z

x

y

y

x

Magnetization

Sample

Alternating Field Demagnetization

Page 21: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

z

x

y

ySample

z

Alternating Field Demagnetization

Page 22: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Display of demagnetization

=+ x,y

y,z

y

zy

x

Both Projections

Page 23: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Two Samples

Magnet-like overprints: IRMs

Page 24: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Easily reproduced/removed

Page 25: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Once removed, first sample:

Page 26: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Two samples:

Page 27: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Second component decays to origin

Page 28: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Second component decays to origin

Page 29: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Second component decays to origin

MCMC

HCHC

Page 30: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Two Magnetization Components

z

x

y

1

2Net

Page 31: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Two Magnetization Components

z

x

y

2Net

Page 32: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Two Magnetization Components

z

x

y

2Net

Page 33: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Two Magnetization Components

z

x

y

Net

Page 34: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Two Magnetization Components

z

x

y

Page 35: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Two Magnetization Components

z

x

y

Page 36: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Two Magnetization Components

z

x

y

Page 37: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Two Magnetization Components

z

x

y

Four of our best samples show these two components: HC to MC: 142-149° apart (~10° error).

142°-149°

HC

MC

Page 38: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Mutually Oriented Samples

145°

HC

MC

?145°

HC

MC

145°

HC

MC

Page 39: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

2/3 Mutually Oriented Samples

Page 40: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

3 Components of 3 Samples

Best fit directions

Page 41: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

3 Components of 3 Samples

MC-HCdistances:

147°123°81°

Compared with:142-149° previously

Best fit directions

Page 42: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

The rock is unshocked, so what thermal (cooling) events could

have permitted its magnetization?

Focus on the timescales for cooling events – compare with timescales for impact-generated fields.

Page 43: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

4.2 Ga (multiple chronometers)

Page 44: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

4.2 Ga (multiple chronometers)

Page 45: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

First Magnetization

4.2 Ga

Page 46: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

4.2 Ga

Page 47: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

4.2 Ga

Page 48: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

4.2 Ga

Page 49: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

4.2 Ga

Page 50: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

Post 4.2 Ga?

4.2 Ga

Page 51: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

Post 4.2 Ga?

4.2 Ga

Page 52: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Constraints at 3.9 Ga

No evidence for argon disturbances

Page 53: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

Post 4.2 Ga?

4.2 Ga

Page 54: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

4.2 Ga

Page 55: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

4.2 Ga

Other arguments rule out importance

of very brief (~1000 s)

heating events.

Page 56: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Rock’s size constrains heating timescale…

• If the rock was ever briefly heated, it must have been conductively heated – Vs. instantaneously due to

shock.– E.g. in an ejecta blanket.

• Time for conductive heating can be calculated: compare to impact-generated field lifetimes.

Ejecta

Rock

Soil

Page 57: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Rock’s size constrains heating timescale…

Model as a sphere of radius 2.5 cm

The heating timescale: order 1000 seconds.Impact-generated fields: order < 100 seconds.Therefore, impact fields could not likely be a

source of magnetization post-3.9 Ga

Hot ejecta

Page 58: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

4.2 Ga

Rule out importance of

very brief (~1000 s)

heating events.

Page 59: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thermal History of 76535

4.2 Ga

First Magnetization

Second Magnetization

Page 60: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Duration of Fields

• It is remarkable that the rock experienced two well-constrained cooling events and has two magnetization components.

• Timescale for each cooling event was much longer than the predicted lifetime of magnetic fields from impacts (max. 1 day).– These magnetization components were likely from

long-lived fields.

Page 61: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Strength of Fields

• Inferred field strength: at least ~1 microtesla.– Determined by applying laboratory fields, and

comparing lab remanence with actual remanence.– Calibrating this technique is difficult.

• The minimum strength is greater than fields expected from the Earth, Sun, protoplanetary disk, or galactic fields.

• The most plausible source of long-lived microtesla-strength fields is a core dynamo.

Page 62: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Why accept a dynamo?

Page 63: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Paleofield from 76535

Modern Earth field (~ 50 μT)

Page 64: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Structure of the Moon

Rich in heat producing elements

Page 65: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Solid body dynamos

Earth Mars

Ganymede Mercury

Moon Asteroids

Page 66: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Thanks to

• Shelsea Peterson & Sarah Slotznick

• Gary Lofgren, Linda Watts, Andrea Mosie (Johnson Space Center)

• CAPTEM

Page 67: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.
Page 68: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.
Page 69: The Search for a Lunar Dynamo Ian Garrick-Bethell Brown University NLSI Director’s Seminar, January 19, 2010.

Lunar crustal magnetism

Impact plasmas may generate/amplify fields.Combined with simultaneous high shock pressures associated with

impacts, rock can become magnetized.

Hood and Artemieva 2008