Are moonquakes real?

Moonquakes – as they are known on the moon – are produced as a result of meteoroids hitting the surface or by the gravitational pull of the Earth squeezing and stretching the moon's interior, in a similar way to the moon's tidal pull on Earth's oceans.
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How common are moonquakes?

Deep moonquakes happen extremely often, typically on a cycle of roughly 27 days, and occur nearly 700 km below the surface of the moon. Most believe that these are caused by the tidal pull of Earth on the moon.
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How do we know about moonquakes?

You'll consider patterns in moonquakes measured by seismometers laid down by astronauts during the early Apollo missions, and high resolution images captured by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera.
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Which is worse moonquakes or earthquakes?

The largest moonquakes are much weaker than the largest earthquakes, though their shaking can last for up to an hour, due to fewer attenuating factors to damp seismic vibrations. Information about moonquakes comes from seismometers placed on the Moon from 1969 through 1972.
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What does a moonquake feel like?

So moonquakes set it vibrating like a tuning fork. Even if a moonquake isn't intense, "it just keeps going and going," Neal says. And for a lunar habitat, that persistence could be more significant than a moonquake's magnitude.
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Moonquakes and Marsquakes



Are there Marsquakes?

NASA's InSight lander touched down on Mars in November 2018 carrying the most sensitive seismometer ever designed. Since the mission's arrival, it has detected countless events dubbed marsquakes, using the signals to map the planet's interior.
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What causes deep moonquakes?

These deep-seated moonquakes are likely caused by tidal forces. Just as the Moon tugs on the Earth's surface and causes ocean tides here, the Earth pulls on the Moon and deforms it. Researchers think that deep moonquakes are probably caused by the Moon continuously stretching and relaxing.
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Did NASA find water on the moon?

In August 2018, NASA confirmed that M3 showed water ice is present on the surface at the Moon poles. Water was confirmed to be on the sunlit surface of the Moon by NASA on October 26, 2020.
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Is the moon shrinking?

The Moon is shrinking as its interior cools, getting more than about 150 feet (50 meters) skinnier over the last several hundred million years. Just as a grape wrinkles as it shrinks down to a raisin, the Moon gets wrinkles as it shrinks.
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What's the strongest possible earthquake?

According to the USGS, earthquakes of magnitude 10 or larger cannot happen. The largest earthquake ever recorded was a magnitude 9.5. It occurred in 1960 near Valdivia, Chile, where the Nazca plate subducts under the South American plate.
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Is it possible to have a month without a full moon?

Well, a month without a full moon can only happen in the month of February, and it takes almost 20 years for the cycle of lunar phases to work out just right. The next month without a full moon will be February 2037. Wishing you clear skies!
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What is the strongest moonquake?

Observed moonquakes have been mostly less than 3 on the Richter scale; the largest recorded ones have a magnitude between 5 and 5.7. Many are repetitive and reoccur at fixed phases of the lunar tidal cycle. The Apollo seismometers recorded the impacts of 11 meteorites with masses of more than one ton.
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Is the Earth shrinking?

Thanks to our leaky atmosphere, Earth loses several hundred tons of mass to space every day, significantly more than what we're gaining from dust. So, overall, Earth is getting smaller.
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How many moonquakes occur annually?

recording of seismic data

detected between 600 and 3,000 moonquakes during each year of their operation, though most of these seismic events were very small. The ground noise on the lunar surface is low compared with that of the Earth, so that the seismographs could be operated at very high magnifications.
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How many earthquakes have there been in the last 24 hours?

87 quakes between magnitude 3 and 4.
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How do Marsquakes happen?

A marsquake is a quake which, much like an earthquake, would be a shaking of the surface or interior of the planet Mars as a result of the sudden release of energy in the planet's interior, such as the result of plate tectonics, which most quakes on Earth originate from, or possibly from hotspots such as Olympus Mons ...
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Why is the moon shaking when I look at it?

The moon is shrinking, and the process has become, literally, unsettling. According to a new study, the moon has gradually been getting smaller. And as it shrinks, cracks form on the lunar surface that then form fault lines and generate moonquakes.
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What is a shaky moon?

A moon wobble is a cyclical shift in the moon's orbit that was first reported in 1728 and happens every 18.6 years. This fluctuation in the Moon's gravitational pull can either suppress or amplify tides on Earth.
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Does the moon have water?

In 2020, NASA announced the discovery of water on the sunlit surface of the Moon. Data from the Strategic Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), revealed that in Clavius crater, water exists in concentrations roughly equivalent to a 12-ounce bottle of water within a cubic meter of soil across the lunar surface.
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How cold is the Moon?

The average temperature on the Moon (at the equator and mid latitudes) varies from -298 degrees Fahrenheit (-183 degrees Celsius), at night, to 224 degrees Fahrenheit (106 degrees Celsius) during the day.
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Is there water on the sun?

As strange as it may seem, yes water has been detected on the Sun. Actually what was detected is 'steam' over a particularly cool sunspot where the temperatures were only about 1000 K or so. Return to the Ask the Space Scientist main page.
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Who invented water?

Who discovered the water? It was the chemist Henry Cavendish (1731 – 1810), who discovered the composition of water, when he experimented with hydrogen and oxygen and mixed these elements together to create an explosion (oxyhydrogen effect).
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Is there a fault line on the moon?

As the moon's interior cools, it shrinks, which causes its hard surface to crack and form fault lines, according to research sponsored by NASA. The moon has gotten about 150 feet skinnier over the last few hundred million years. NASA posted a video on Twitter showing fault lines on the moon's surface.
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Is the moon still active?

In 2012, new observations showed surface features, called graben, which form where the crust has pulled apart; these features are evidence that the Moon is expanding in some places. These discoveries suggest that the Moon is still geologically active and challenge ideas about how the Moon formed and evolved.
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What did scientists learn from creating artificial moonquakes?

What did scientists learn from creating artificial moonquakes? Scientists determined that the moon may have a small core of molten rock at its center.
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