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Wikenigma - an Encyclopedia of Unknowns Wikenigma - an Encyclopedia of the Unknown

Moon's Magnetic Field

It's been known since the US Apollo Program in the late 1960s that The Moon has magnetic rocks - far weaker than The Earth's, but strong enough for accurate measurements.

The magnetised regions are scattered across the surface rather than forming a generalised 'polar' pattern such as Earth's. In some regions, the field can be measured at around 0.3μT (micro Teslas).

Since it's widely assumed that The Moon does not have a molten iron core, the origins of the fields remain unexplained.

There are several hypotheses :

  • The Moon may at some stage have had a 'geodynamo' (spinning iron core), now lost
  • The fields may have been caused by electromagnetic activity during large impacts
  • Incoming debris might itself have had magnetic fields

Example publication : Sci Adv. 7(32):


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