The moon is getting smaller, which causes wrinkles in its surface and moonquakes, according to a new study.
As the moon’s interior cools, it shrinks, which causes its hard surface to crack and form fault lines, according to research sponsored by NASA, reports Time magazine.
The moon has gotten about 150 feet skinnier over the last few hundred million years.
NASA posted a video on Twitter showing fault lines on the moon’s surface.
You've heard of earthquakes. But what about moonquakes? Like a wrinkled grape drying out to a raisin, the Moon is shrinking as its interior cools causing wrinkles or faults to form on its brittle surface. When enough stress builds, it releases the quakes: https://t.co/H3ixgywT1p pic.twitter.com/OxNrVveAQk
— NASA (@NASA) May 13, 2019
Astronauts have placed seismometers on the moon over a series of past missions. Scientists, who determined that the moonquakes are close enough to the fault lines to establish causality, published their analysis in a study in Nature Geoscience on Monday, according to NASA.
The space agency has also recorded evidence of fault lines in a series of images.
“Our analysis gives the first evidence that these faults are still active and likely producing moonquakes today as the Moon continues to gradually cool and shrink,” said Thomas Watters, lead author of the study and senior scientist in the Center for Earth and Planetary Studies at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum, according to a press release on NASA’s website.
Watters says that the quakes can be strong, around a five on the Richter scale, according to the NASA statement.