There Could Be Lava Tubes on the Moon, Large Enough for Whole Cities
This year, one of the biggest attention-grabbers was the findings presented on Tuesday, March 17th by a team of students from Purdue University. Led by a graduate student from the university’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, the study they shared indicates that there may be stable lava tubes on the moon, ones large enough to house entire cities.
In addition to being a target for future geological and geophysical studies, the existence of these tubes could also be a boon for future human space exploration. Basically, they argued, such large, stable underground tunnels could provide a home for human settlements, shielding them from harmful cosmic radiation and extremes in temperature.
Lava tubes are natural conduits formed by flowing
lava that is moving beneath the surface as a result of a volcanic
eruption. As the lava moves, the outer edges of it cools, forming a
hardened, channel-like crust which is left behind once the lava flow
stops. For some time, Lunar scientists have been speculating as to
whether or not lava flows happen on the Moon, as evidenced by the
presence of sinuous rilles on the surface.
Sinuous rilles are narrow depressions in the lunar surface that
resemble channels, and have a curved paths that meanders across the
landscape like a river valley. It is currently believed that these
rilles are the remains of collapsed lava tubes or extinct lava flows,
which is backed up by the fact they usually begin at the site of an
extinct volcano.Those that have been observed on the Moon in the past range in size of up to 10 kilometers in width and hundreds of kilometers in length. At that size, the existence of a stable tube – i.e. one which had not collapsed to form a sinuous rille – would be large enough to accommodate a major city.
For the sake of their study, the Purdue team
explored whether lava tubes of the same scale could exist underground.
What they found was that the stability of a lava tube depended on a
number of variables- including width, roof thickness and the stress
state of the cooled lava. he researchers also modeled lava tubes with
walls created by lava placed in one thick layer and with lava placed in
many thin layers.
David Blair, a graduate student in Purdue’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, led the study that examined whether empty lava tubes more than 1 kilometer wide could remain structurally stable on the moon.
“Our
work is somewhat unique in that we’ve combined the talents of people
from various Departments at Purdue,” Blair told Universe Today via
email. “With guidance
from Prof. Bobet (a civil engineering professor) we’ve been able to
incorporate a modern understanding of rock mechanics into our computer
models of lava tubes to see how they might actually fail and break under
lunar gravity.”
For the sake of their research, the team constructed a number of models of
lava tubes of different sizes and with different roof thicknesses to
test for stability. This consisted of them checking each model to see if
it predicted failure anywhere in the lava tube’s roof.
“What
we found was surprising,” Blair continued, “in that much larger lava
tubes are theoretically possible than what was previously thought. Even
with a roof only a few meters thick,
lava tubes a kilometer wide may be able to stay standing. The reason
why, though, is a little less surprising. The last work we could find on
the subject is from the Apollo era, and used a much simpler approximation of lava tube shape – a flat beam for a roof.
The study he refers to, “On the origin of lunar sinuous rilles“, was published in 1969 in the journal Modern Geology.
In it, professors Greeley, Oberbeck and Quaide advanced the argument
that sinuous rilles formation was tied to the collapse of lava flow
tubes, and that stable ones might still exist. Calculating for a
flat-beam roof, their work found a maximum lava tube size of just under 400 m.
“Our
models use a geometry more similar to what’s seen in lava tubes on
Earth,” Blair said, “a sort of half-elliptical shape with an arched
roof. The fact that an arched roof lets a larger lava tube stay standing
makes sense: humans have known since antiquity that arched roofs allow
tunnels or bridges to stay standing with wider spans.”
The Purdue study also builds on previous studies
conducted by JAXA and NASA where images of “skylights” on the Moon –
i.e. holes in the lunar surface – confirmed the presence of caverns at
least a few tens of meters across. The data from NASA’s lunar Gravity
Recovery And Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) – which showed big variations
in the thickness of the Moon’s crust is still being interpreted, but
could also be an indication of large subsurface recesses.
As a
result, Blair is confident that their work opens up new and feasible
explanations for many different types of observations that have been
made before. Previously, it was unfathomable that large, stable caverns
could exist on the Moon. But thanks to his team’s theoretical study, it
is now known that under the proper conditions, it is least possible.
Another exciting aspect that this work is the
implications it offers for future exploration and even colonization on
the Moon. Already, the issue of protection against radiation is a big
one. Given that the Moon has no atmosphere, colonists and agricultural
operations will have no natural shielding from cosmic rays.
“Geologically stable lava tubes would absolutely be a boon to human space exploration,” Blair commented. “A
cavern like that could be a really ideal place for building a lunar
base, and generally for supporting a sustained human presence on the
Moon. By going below
the surface even a few meters, you suddenly mitigate a lot of the
problems with trying to inhabit the lunar surface.”
Basically, in addition to protecting against
radiation, a subsurface base would sidestep the problems of
micrometeorites and the extreme changes in temperature that are common
on the lunar surface. What’s more, stable, subsurface lava tubes could
also make the task of pressurizing a base for human habitation easier.
“People
have studied and talked about all of these things before,” Blair added,
“but our work shows that those kinds of opportunities could potentially
exist – now we just have to find them. Humans have been living in caves
since the beginning, and it might make sense on the Moon, too!”
In addition to Melosh, Blair and Bobet, team members include Loic Chappaz and Rohan Sood, graduate students in the School of Aeronautics and Astronautics;
Kathleen Howell, Purdue’s Hsu Lo Professor of Aeronautical and
Astronautical Engineering; Andy M. Freed, an associate professor of
earth, atmospheric and planetary sciences; and Colleen Milbury, a
postdoctoral research associate in the Department of Earth, Atmospheric
and Planetary Sciences.
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