Moon may be 4.5 billion years old

Scientists have found the Moon was formed nearly 100 million years after the start of the solar system, suggesting that the Earth’s natural satellite is about 4.5 billion years old.

This conclusion is based on measurements from the interior of the Earth combined with computer simulations of the protoplanetary disk from which the Earth and other terrestrial planets formed.

Researchers simulated the growth of the terrestrial planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars) from a disk of thousands of planetary building blocks orbiting the Sun.

By analysing the growth history of the Earth-like planets from 259 simulations, the scientists discovered a relationship between the time the Earth was impacted by a Mars-sized object to create the Moon and the amount of material added to the Earth after that impact.

Augmenting the computer simulation with details on the mass of material added to the Earth by accretion after the formation of the Moon revealed a relationship that works much like a clock to date the Moon-forming event.

This is the first “geologic clock” in early solar system history that does not rely on measurements and interpretations of the radioactive decay of atomic nuclei to determine age.

“We were excited to find a ‘clock’ for the formation time of the Moon that didn’t rely on radiometric dating methods. This correlation just jumped out of the simulations and held in each set of old simulations we looked at,” said lead author Seth Jacobson from the Observatory de la Cote d’Azur, France.

Published literature provided the estimate for the mass accreted by Earth after the Moon-forming impact.

Other scientists previously demonstrated that the abundance in the Earth’s mantle of highly siderophile elements, which are atomic elements that prefer to be chemically associated with iron, is directly proportional to the mass accreted by the Earth after the Moon-forming impact.

From these geochemical measurements, the newly established clock dates the Moon to about 95 million years after the beginning of the solar system.

This estimate for the Moon-formation agrees with some interpretations of radioactive dating measurements, but not others, researchers said.

Because the new dating method is an independent and direct measurement of the age of the Moon, it helps to guide which radioactive dating measurements are the most useful for this longstanding problem, they said.

“This result is exciting because in the same simulations that can successfully form Mars in only 2 to 5 million years, we can also form the Moon at 100 million years. These vastly different timescales have been very hard to capture in simulations,” said Dr Kevin Walsh from the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) Space Science and Engineering Division.

The research was published in the journal Nature.