A Spherule from the Earth's Moon
How did this spherule come to be on the Moon?
When a meteorite strikes the Moon, the energy
of the impact melts some of the splattering rock, a fraction of which might cool into tiny glass beads.
Many of these
glass beads were present in lunar soil samples returned to Earth by the Apollo
missions.
Pictured above is one such glass spherule that measures only a quarter of a millimeter across.
This spherule
is particularly interesting because it has
been victim to an even smaller impact.
A miniature crater is visible on the upper left, surrounded by a fragmented area caused by the shockwaves of the small impact.
By dating many of these impacts, some astronomers estimate that cratering on our Moon
increased roughly 500 million years ago and continues even today.