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    Home»Space»The Moon’s Top Layer Has Enough Oxygen To Sustain 8 Billion People for 100,000 Years
    Space

    The Moon’s Top Layer Has Enough Oxygen To Sustain 8 Billion People for 100,000 Years

    By John Grant, Southern Cross UniversityNovember 14, 20215 Comments5 Mins Read
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    Aristarchus Crater
    Aristarchus Crater on the moon. Credit: NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University

    The Moon’s regolith contains vast oxygen reserves, potentially enough to support humanity for 100,000 years—if we can overcome the energy and engineering hurdles to extract it.

    Alongside advances in space exploration, we’ve recently seen much time and money invested into technologies that could allow effective space resource utilization. And at the forefront of these efforts has been a laser-sharp focus on finding the best way to produce oxygen on the Moon.

    In October, the Australian Space Agency and NASA signed a deal to send an Australian-made rover to the Moon under the Artemis program, with a goal to collect lunar rocks that could ultimately provide breathable oxygen on the Moon.

    Although the Moon does have an atmosphere, it’s very thin and composed mostly of hydrogen, neon, and argon. It’s not the sort of gaseous mixture that could sustain oxygen-dependent mammals such as humans.

    That said, there is actually plenty of oxygen on the Moon. It just isn’t in a gaseous form. Instead, it’s trapped inside regolith — the layer of rock and fine dust that covers the Moon’s surface. If we could extract oxygen from regolith, would it be enough to support human life on the Moon?

    The Breadth of Oxygen

    Oxygen can be found in many of the minerals in the ground around us. And the Moon is mostly made of the same rocks you’ll find on Earth (although with a slightly greater amount of material that came from meteors).

    Minerals such as silica, aluminum, and iron and magnesium oxides dominate the Moon’s landscape. All of these minerals contain oxygen, but not in a form our lungs can access.

    On the Moon these minerals exist in a few different forms including hard rock, dust, gravel, and stones covering the surface. This material has resulted from the impacts of meteorites crashing into the lunar surface over countless millennia.

    Some people call the Moon’s surface layer lunar “soil,” but as a soil scientist, I’m hesitant to use this term. Soil as we know it is pretty magical stuff that only occurs on Earth. It has been created by a vast array of organisms working on the soil’s parent material — regolith, derived from hard rock — over millions of years.

    The result is a matrix of minerals that were not present in the original rocks. Earth’s soil is imbued with remarkable physical, chemical, and biological characteristics. Meanwhile, the materials on the Moon’s surface is basically regolith in its original, untouched form.

    One Substance Goes In, Two Come Out

    The Moon’s regolith is made up of approximately 45% oxygen. But that oxygen is tightly bound into the minerals mentioned above. In order to break apart those strong bonds, we need to put in energy.

    You might be familiar with this if you know about electrolysis. On Earth this process is commonly used in manufacturing, such as to produce aluminum. An electrical current is passed through a liquid form of aluminum oxide (commonly called alumina) via electrodes, to separate the aluminum from the oxygen.

    In this case, the oxygen is produced as a byproduct. On the Moon, the oxygen would be the main product, and the aluminum (or other metal) extracted would be a potentially useful byproduct.

    Alumina Refinery
    Alumina (aluminum oxide) refinery. Aluminum is produced in two stages. Before pure aluminum can be released using electrolysis (in what is known as the Hall-Heroult process), alumina refineries must first refine naturally occurring bauxite ore to extract the alumina (from which pure aluminum is later retrieved).

    It’s a pretty straightforward process, but there is a catch: it’s very energy-hungry. To be sustainable, it would need to be supported by solar energy or other energy sources available on the Moon.

    Extracting oxygen from regolith would also require substantial industrial equipment. We’d need to first convert solid metal oxide into liquid form, either by applying heat, or heat combined with solvents or electrolytes. We have the technology to do this on Earth, but moving this apparatus to the Moon – and generating enough energy to run it – will be a mighty challenge.

    Earlier this year, Belgium-based startup Space Applications Services announced it was building three experimental reactors to improve the process of making oxygen via electrolysis. They expect to send the technology to the Moon by 2025 as part of the European Space Agency’s In-Situ Resource Utilization (ISRU) mission.

    How Much Oxygen Could the Moon Provide?

    That said, when we do manage to pull it off, how much oxygen might the Moon actually deliver? Well, quite a lot as it turns out.

    If we ignore oxygen tied up in the Moon’s deeper hard rock material — and just consider regolith which is easily accessible on the surface — we can come up with some estimates.

    Each cubic meter of lunar regolith contains 1.4 tonnes of minerals on average, including about 630 kilograms (1,390lb)  of oxygen. NASA says humans need to breathe about 800 grams (1.8 pounds) of oxygen a day to survive. So 630kg of oxygen would keep a person alive for about two years (or just over).

    Now let’s assume the average depth of regolith on the Moon is about ten meters, and that we can extract all of the oxygen from this. That means the top ten meters of the Moon’s surface would provide enough oxygen to support all eight billion people on Earth for somewhere around 100,000 years.

    This would also depend on how effectively we managed to extract and use the oxygen. Regardless, this figure is pretty amazing!

    Having said that, we do have it pretty good here on Earth. And we should do everything we can to protect the blue planet — and its soil in particular — which continues to support all terrestrial life without us even trying.

    Written by John Grant, Lecturer in Soil Science, Southern Cross University.

    This article was first published in The Conversation.

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    5 Comments

    1. VernonB on November 15, 2021 11:41 am

      This is wonderful info, sadly colonizing the moon will require, “Brave Men and Women”, “Enormous amounts of capital”, “Technology currently unavailable”, etc. not to mention the most important thing of all, “Political Will and foresight, something rare in the modern world”.

      Reply
    2. Honest citizen on November 15, 2021 4:50 pm

      Make sure don’t let liberals to go there, they will tax oxygen that people will breath

      Reply
    3. Bob on November 16, 2021 4:41 am

      Don’t let capitalists go there. They’ll create a false scarcity so they can sell oxygen for profit.

      Reply
    4. Ds on November 17, 2021 12:08 am

      Look closely, zoom in all the way and you will see structures everywhere in this photo, yes it’s blurry, theses photos always are, we all know that we have the technology to take much better resolution then this smudged out photo. The moon is full of structures and life, but we’re not supposed to know this!
      Open your eyes people, and open your mind, you will see all.
      If you want more truth, go to “bruce sees all”
      “Cindi Loohoo”
      Both on YouTube, enjoy! If you enjoy moon photos and videos, you’re ready to be amazed

      Reply
    5. Nomad on November 19, 2021 8:42 am

      The real Question is:
      Can moon sustain a livable atmosphere and how long?
      What happens to the oxygen when it is released from rocks- will it stay there for us to breathe or react with other elements or just escape to space?

      Reply
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