• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

There Are Places On The Moon That Never See Sunlight – Here’s Why

August 17, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Some areas of the Moon have never seen sunlight. Within certain craters, mainly around the polar regions of the Moon, there are bits that have never seen the light of day and never will. In those regions, spacecraft have determined that deposits of water ice are present. And that’s where space agencies are planning to send rovers, landers, and, in a few years, humans.

But how come sunlight never reaches those areas? It is all down to the tilt of the Moon. Consider the Earth. With a tilt of 23.5 degrees with respect to the orbital plane, we have times when the Northern Hemisphere is pointing toward the Sun (Boreal Summer or right now), when it is pointing away (Austral summer), or when both Hemispheres get the same amount of light (fall and spring). But this is not the case for the Moon.

Advertisement



Its tilt with respect to the Earth’s orbit around the Sun is 1.5 degrees. The Moon is pretty much pointing vertically. This means that no matter when the motion of the Moon around the Earth, the rays of the Sun are hitting the Moon almost perpendicularly. So the equatorial regions are getting lots of light, but it is very easy to cast long shadows at the poles. It’s always late afternoon in the dead of winter in the lunar polar regions.

A single mountain there would not create permanent night. As the Moon rotates, the shadow would too. But if you have a rimmed crater, things would be different. The bottom and part of the wall would never get sunlight. The Sun would always be behind the rim.

There is water in those craters 

Regions of permanent darkness have been nicknamed cold traps. The reason for it will become obvious in a second. The temperature in these shadowed areas always remains below -160°C (-260 °F). When ice forms there, it stays there. It is so cold that ice under those temperatures, even in a place without an atmosphere, behaves like a rock. It will stay put for a billion years.

Advertisement

Both poles have these cold traps but 60 percent of them are found beyond 80 degrees of latitude on the South Pole. That’s why the region has attracted such high interest from space agencies. Russia’s Luna 25 aims to get there in a few days. Followed by India’s Chandrayaan-3, a few days later.

Automatic missions will also come from China with the Chang’e-7 lander and rover combo expected to get there in 2026 and a private mission from Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin. And then there is Artemis 3. The mission to take humans back to the Moon is currently scheduled to take place in December 2025.

Due to SpaceX’s Starship blowing up in the air and damaging the launch pad, resulting in major delays, Artemis 3 might instead become a different mission with no landing there.

Where does the water on the Moon come from?

There is a mixture of sources of water on the Moon and it’s not just ice in the cold traps. Some can be found in hydrated minerals, and even beads of glass that formed after the impact between the Moon and smaller bodies in the Solar System.

Advertisement

If we are considering water molecules themselves and not as a possible source of material for a future settlement, water is found everywhere on the surface of the Moon. Sure there is plenty of ice in the shadowed craters but there are even water molecules in the dust grains of the sunlit regions.

Until more research is done, the source cannot be completely pinned down. Ancient volcanic processes have contributed to it. Comets and icy micrometeorites are also believed to be major players, but the interaction between the lunar soil and the plasma in the solar wind could end up making water.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Tennis-Scrappy Sakkari survives gruelling three-setter to beat Andreescu
  2. Cricket-NZ players reach Dubai after ‘specific, credible threat’ derailed Pakistan tour
  3. Qantas to bring forward restart of international flights to November
  4. Expand Your Mind With Babbel, Now 55% Off

Source Link: There Are Places On The Moon That Never See Sunlight – Here's Why

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • What Does Moose Meat Taste Like? The World’s Largest Deer Is A Staple In Parts Of The World
  • 11 Of The Last Spix’s Macaws In The Wild Struck Down With A Deadly, Highly Contagious Virus
  • Meet The Rose Hair Tarantula: Pink, Predatory, And Popular As A Pet
  • 433 Eros: First Near-Earth Asteroid Ever Discovered Will Fly By Earth This Weekend – And You Can Watch It
  • We’re Going To Enceladus (Maybe)! ESA’s Plans For Alien-Hunting Mission To Land On Saturn’s Moon Is A Go
  • World’s Oldest Little Penguin, Lazzie, Celebrates 25th Birthday – But She’s Still Young At Heart
  • “We Will Build The Gateway”: Lunar Gateway’s Future Has Been Rocky – But ESA Confirms It’s A Go
  • Clothes Getting Eaten By Moths? Here’s What To Do
  • We Finally Know Where Pet Cats Come From – And It’s Not Where We Thought
  • Why The 17th Century Was A Really, Really Dreadful Time To Be Alive
  • Why Do Barnacles Attach To Whales?
  • You May Believe This Widely Spread Myth About How Microwave Ovens Work
  • If You Had A Pole Stretching From England To France And Yanked It, Would The Other End Move Instantly?
  • This “Dead Leaf” Is Actually A Spider That’s Evolved As A Master Of Disguise And Trickery
  • There Could Be 10,000 More African Forest Elephants Than We Thought – But They’re Still Critically Endangered
  • After Killing Half Of South Georgia’s Elephant Seals, Avian Flu Reaches Remote Island In The Indian Ocean
  • Jaguars, Disease, And Guns: The Darién Gap Is One Of Planet Earth’s Last Ungovernable Frontiers
  • The Coldest Place On Earth? Temperatures Here Can Plunge Down To -98°C In The Bleak Midwinter
  • ESA’s JUICE Spacecraft Imaged Comet 3I/ATLAS As It Flew Towards Jupiter. We’ll Have To Wait Until 2026 To See The Photos
  • Have We Finally “Seen” Dark Matter? Galactic Gamma-Ray Halo May Be First Direct Evidence Of Universe’s Invisible “Glue”
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version