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Below is the online edition of In the Beginning: Compelling Evidence for Creation and the Flood, by Dr. Walt Brown. Copyright © Center for Scientific Creation. All rights reserved.

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[ Technical Notes > How Much Dust and Meteoritic Debris Should the Moon Have If It Is 4,600,000,000 Years Old? > The Data ]

The Data

How much meteoritic material is striking the Moon? More specifically, how many particles (N) greater than a certain mass (m) pass through a square meter on the Moon’s surface each second? This is called the cumulative flux. The data are usually reported on a logarithmic coordinate system as shown in Figure 259, because so many more smaller particles strike the Moon than larger particles.

Particle sizes vary widely. Solar wind blows most particles smaller than 10-13 gram out of the solar system. At the other extreme are large crater-forming meteorites. Measurements exist for the influx of meteoritic material in three regions across this broad range. The first will be called Region A; the second will be called Region C; and the last will be called Point E. Regions B and D are interpolated between these known regions and are shown as the blue dashed lines in Figure 259.

Region A is based on impacts registered on a satellite 0.98–1.02 astronomical units from the Sun.2 The curve for Region A is

        log NA  =  –10.08 – 0.55 log m      (10–13  <  m  <  10–6  gm)

Seismometers placed on the Moon provided the data for Region C.3 The results, again where NC is the number of particles per square meter per second that are greater than mass m, were

        log NC  =  –15.12 – 1.16 log m          (102  <  m  <  106  gm)

The equation for Region B is obtained by finding the line that joins the far right point in Region A with the far left point in Region C.  That equation is

        log NB  =  –14.77 – 1.33 log m        (10–6  <  m  <  102  gm)

Point E is based on the fact that “there are 125 structures [craters] on the Moon with diameters greater than 100 km.”4 The diameter of a large meteorite, impacting at typical velocities, is about 12% of its crater’s diameter. If the density of meteorites is 3 gm/cm3, then the mass of a meteorite that could form a crater 100 km in diameter would be

technicalnoteszz-moon_dust01.jpg Image Thumbnail

The Moon’s surface area is 3.8 × 1013 m2. If the largest 125 meteorites struck the Moon during the last 4.6 × 109 years, then the average cumulative flux at Point E is

technicalnoteszz-moon_dust02.jpg Image Thumbnail

Point E connects to Region C by the curve

     log ND = -18.91 - 0.53 log m (106 < m < 2.7 × 1018 gm)

The task now is to integrate the total mass of meteoritic material in Regions A, B, C, and D. To do this, we must convert these cumulative flux curves to the thickness of meteoritic material.

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