Diverse glasses revealed from Chang’E-5 lunar regolith

Author:

Zhao Rui12,Shen Laiquan1,Xiao Dongdong1,Chang Chao12ORCID,Huang Yao12,Yu Jihao12,Zhang Huaping1,Liu Ming3,Zhao Shaofan3,Yao Wei3,Lu Zhen1,Sun Baoan14,Bai Haiyang124ORCID,Zou Zhigang35,Yang Mengfei36,Wang Weihua143

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100190 , China

2. Center of Materials Science and Optoelectronics Engineering, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100049 , China

3. Qian Xuesen Laboratory of Space Technology, China Academy of Space Technology , Beijing 100094 , China

4. Songshan Lake Materials Laboratory , Dongguan 523808 , China

5. College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Nanjing University , Nanjing 210093 , China

6. China Academy of Space Technology , Beijing 100094 , China

Abstract

ABSTRACT Lunar glasses with different origins act as snapshots of their formation processes, providing a rich archive of the Moon's formation and evolution. Here, we reveal diverse glasses from Chang’E-5 (CE-5) lunar regolith, and clarify their physical origins of liquid quenching, vapor deposition and irradiation damage respectively. The series of quenched glasses, including rotation-featured particles, vesicular agglutinates and adhered melts, record multiple-scale impact events. Abundant micro-impact products, like micron- to nano-scale glass droplets or craters, highlight that the regolith is heavily reworked by frequent micrometeorite bombardment. Distinct from Apollo samples, the indigenous ultra-elongated glass fibers drawn from viscous melts and the widespread ultra-thin deposited amorphous rims without nanophase iron particles both indicate a relatively gentle impact environment at the CE-5 landing site. The clarification of multitype CE-5 glasses also provides a catalogue of diverse lunar glasses, meaning that more of the Moon's mysteries, recorded in glasses, could be deciphered in future.

Funder

Chinese Academy of Sciences

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Guangdong Major Project of Basic and Applied Basic Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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