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12 сакавіка 2026, 12:51
Chinese scientists refine lunar global chemistry mapping using farside ground truth information
Photo: iStock
BEIJING, 12 March (BelTA - Xinhua) - A team of Chinese scientists has
unveiled a high-resolution atlas detailing the global distribution of
lunar surface chemistry, a significant advance that fills a critical
data gap in the geological study of the moon's far side.
Mapping
the chemistry across the lunar global surface is essential for
understanding the moon's magmatic evolution and geological history, and
holds profound implications for studying the Earth-moon system.
Previous
estimates of elemental abundances relied primarily on remote sensing
data calibrated with sample-based ground truth information from the
lunar nearside, according to a recent research article published in the
journal Nature Sensors. This left the far side of the moon largely
unconstrained, introducing substantial uncertainties in geological
models for terrains with complex compositions, especially within the
scientifically vital South Pole-Aitken (SPA) basin.
To overcome
this long-standing challenge, the research team, led by the Shanghai
Institute of Technical Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences,
developed an intelligent inversion framework for lunar chemical
components leveraging a residual convolutional neural network, on the
basis of farside ground truth data from the samples taken back by the
Chang'e-6 mission and combining high-resolution visible-to-near-infrared
multispectral-band image data from the lunar orbiter.
By
employing a model-fine-tuning strategy to optimally calibrate elemental
abundances, the team generated high-precision global maps of major
elemental oxides that incorporate farside ground truth information.
This
breakthrough successfully constrains the extent and composition of
farside terranes and precisely reveals deep-seated materials exposed
within the SPA basin and highlands.
The maps quantitatively
demonstrate that the proportion of exposed magnesian anorthosite in the
farside highlands is significantly higher than on the nearside. This
provides new measured evidence supporting the hypothesis of asymmetric
crystallization and differentiation of the lunar magma ocean between the
two hemispheres.
By integrating farside ground truth information
into global geochemical mapping, this study deepens the understanding
of crust-mantle structure, hemispherical evolutionary differences, and
the formation and evolution of the SPA basin.
It provides
high-precision, quantitative guidance for future landing site selection,
resource exploration, and the planning of lunar exploration missions.
The
Chang'e-6 probe was launched by China on May 3, 2024. On June 25, 2024,
its returner landed in north China, bringing back 1,935.3 grams of
samples from the far side of the moon.