Publication Abstracts
Cameron 1972
Cameron, A.G.W., 1972: Orbital eccentricity of Mercury and the origin of the Moon. Nature, 240, 299-300, doi:10.1038/240299a0.
A number of mechanisms for the formation of the Moon have been suggested; fission of the Earth, precipitation in a hot gaseous silicate atmosphere, independent formation in orbit about the Earth, and independent formation elsewhere in the solar system followed by capture by the Earth. Although the last of these mechanisms has been admitted to be improbable by its proponents, they have shown that it is by no means impossible dynamically. The principal objection to this mechanism is the strange composition of the Moon. It has been recognized for many years that the low mean density of the Moon implies that it is highly deficient in metallic iron. The lunar exploration programme has also shown that the Moon is much more deficient than the Earth in the more volatile of the condensable elements. Because of the apparent difficulty of satisfying these composition constraints in a theory in which the Moon is formed elsewhere in the solar system, I have tended to favour the other mechanisms mentioned above.
- Get PDF (246 kB. Document is scanned, no OCR.)
- PDF documents require the free Adobe Reader or compatible viewing software to be viewed.
- Go to journal article webpage
Export citation: [ BibTeX ] [ RIS ]
BibTeX Citation
@article{ca07610p, author={Cameron, A. G. W.}, title={Orbital eccentricity of Mercury and the origin of the Moon}, year={1972}, journal={Nature}, volume={240}, pages={299--300}, doi={10.1038/240299a0}, }
[ Close ]
RIS Citation
TY - JOUR ID - ca07610p AU - Cameron, A. G. W. PY - 1972 TI - Orbital eccentricity of Mercury and the origin of the Moon JA - Nature JO - Nature VL - 240 SP - 299 EP - 300 DO - 10.1038/240299a0 ER -
[ Close ]