Abstract
Measurements have been made of the thermal
radiation from the moon in a 15 Mc/s. band, centred at 24,000 Mc/s. The
radiation from the whole lunar disk has been measured during several phase
cycles. Temperatures corresponding to this radiation have been deduced and
curves of temperature against phase angle drawn. One of these corresponds to
average temperature over the disk and the other to the temperature of a point
on the lunar equator. They are found to be approximately sinusoidal, with
amplitude � 40.3 �K, and � 52.0 �K. respectively and with a phase lag behind
the lunar phase angle of about 45� in each case.
These results conflict with previous
measurements of temperature at long infra-red wavelengths in both amplitude and
phase angle of the temperature curve. An explanation is given in terms of
radiation from subsurface layers of the moon's crust, which are partially
transparent to the electromagnetic waves with which we are dealing. The theory
is developed quantitatively and it is found that the results are consistent
with the existence of a thin layer of dust covering a solid lunar surface.
Estimates are made of the temperatures of
the disk of the new moon (156 �K.) and of the deep interior (241 �K.).
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