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  • To nearly everyone, the moon appears to be a sterile, gray, unchanging world. But while

  • the moon has remained largely unchanged during human history, our own understanding of it

  • has evolved dramatically. Thanks to new observations, we now have not only unprecedented views of

  • its surface, but a whole new tour of the moon that shows how both it and other rocky planets

  • in our solar system have been shaped over billions of years. We'll start with one of

  • the largest impacts--Orientale Basin, a feature that's as wide as the distance from New York

  • City to Cincinnati. Using new elevation measurements, we can clearly see the effects of what is

  • likely the last giant impact event in lunar history, with its outer mountain rings rising

  • many kilometers above the lowest points inside the crater. The interiors of some craters

  • in the moon's polar regions, like Shackleton, haven't seen sunlight in over two billion

  • years. However, new measurements have created our best-yet maps of these types of craters,

  • allowing us to see deep into the shadows of this surprisingly young-looking impact crater

  • in the south that's more than twice as deep as the Grand Canyon. Some impacts are invisible

  • for other reasons. Although the ancient South Pole-Aitken Basin is difficult to see from

  • orbit because it is so large, new LRO topography maps reveal the largest impact basin in the

  • Earth- moon system, measuring several kilometers in depth and around 2500 kilometers in diameter.

  • Only the Hellas basin on Mars rivals it in size. One of the youngest large-scale impacts

  • on the moon is the Tycho Crater. This fresh crater may have formed only 108 million years

  • ago--when dinosaurs roamed the Earth. We now also have an extreme close-up view of the

  • crater's central peak--revealing a mountain with sharp edges, building-sized rocks, and

  • a central boulder about the size of a baseball stadium. [music] Narrator: The Aristarchus

  • Plateau is another recent lunar formation that has long interested scientists and astronomers.

  • The crater itself formed in the same era as the Tycho Crater, and what appear to be snaking

  • river valleys were actually carved by ancient lava flows. [music] Narrator: Next, we arrive

  • at Mare Serenitatis on the near side of the moon. In December of 1972, the crew of Apollo

  • 17 landed in the Taurus Littrow valley, marking the last time humans have visited the surface

  • of the moon. With images from LRO's narrow-angle camera, we can clearly see the evidence of

  • that visit. In this image, you can easily see the base of the lunar lander, along with

  • the lunar rover, parked far from the blast-off zone. You can also clearly see the astronaut

  • trails and the wheeltracks left on the lunar surface. [music] Narrator: We now head to

  • the far side of the moon--which cannot be seen from Earth. Our first stop is the Compton-Belkovich

  • region, which shows evidence for young volcanic activity in the farside highlands. This feature

  • is unique not only because it is isolated from other volcanoes in the area, but also

  • because it is located nowhere near the maria, where volcanoes are usually found. Also, on

  • the far side, we find the Jackson Crater--which like the Tycho Crater on the near side, has

  • an extensive and complex ray system. In fact, this crater is often considered to be like

  • a twin to Tycho. Finally, the Tsiolkovsky Crater stands out as an excellent example

  • of a farside crater filled with a sea of ancient lava--known as a mare. It is particularly

  • interesting to scientists and other observers because of its isolation from other similar

  • craters--as well as its beautiful central peak. As we continue to study the moon, our

  • understanding of it improves, giving us new insights not only into how it has evolved

  • over time, but also how other rocky planets in our solar system have come to look the

  • way they do. With new missions, new instruments, and new technologies, we will continue to

  • improve our knowledge of the moon... ...and better understand the history of our solar

  • system.

To nearly everyone, the moon appears to be a sterile, gray, unchanging world. But while

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月のツアー (Tour of the moon)

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    阿多賓 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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