1 00:00:00,080 --> 00:00:04,140 music throughout 2 00:00:04,160 --> 00:00:08,190 Narrator: : To every astronaut or spacecraft, the Sun is a damaging source of radiation. 3 00:00:08,210 --> 00:00:12,060 All objects traveling through space must contend with this hazard, including planets. Even the moon has the scars 4 00:00:12,080 --> 00:00:16,170 to prove it. New NASA research suggests that some of the coloration 5 00:00:16,190 --> 00:00:20,380 we see on the moon could be a form of sunburn. 6 00:00:20,400 --> 00:00:26,920 Andrew Poppe: The leading hypothesis is that the magnetic fields are blocking 7 00:00:26,940 --> 00:00:31,110 some portion of the solar wind from reaching the surface 8 00:00:31,130 --> 00:00:35,300 Narrator: The solar wind is the Sun’s continuous outflow of particles and radiation that fills the inner solar system. Earth’s magnetic field provides a strong, 9 00:00:35,320 --> 00:00:39,400 global shield against it. However, the magnetic field on the moon is much weaker, 10 00:00:39,420 --> 00:00:43,650 and it forms only small, localized bubbles of protection. In these spots, 11 00:00:43,670 --> 00:00:47,840 the Sun’s particles can be reflected back into the solar wind or funneled to nearby regions. 12 00:00:47,860 --> 00:00:52,000 The shielded areas under the magnetic field form pale swirls. 13 00:00:52,020 --> 00:00:56,740 The bordering parts become darker. The contrast is so prominent, 14 00:00:56,760 --> 00:01:00,940 we can see it from Earth. 15 00:01:00,960 --> 00:01:05,020 Poppe: Those are regions acting as this magnetic sunscreen. You know, sometimes you put on sunscreen 16 00:01:05,040 --> 00:01:09,190 and you miss a tiny little bit, and then you have are really bright red spot on your skin where you missed it. 17 00:01:09,210 --> 00:01:13,370 That's in some ways the analogy for the region of the moon that is extra exposed. 18 00:01:13,390 --> 00:01:17,550 Narrator: Unfortunately, the moon’s patches of magnetic field are not 19 00:01:17,570 --> 00:01:21,600 robust enough to completely protect human explorers from the Sun’s radiation, 20 00:01:21,620 --> 00:01:25,790 but further study of lunar magnetic fields could lay the groundwork for 21 00:01:25,810 --> 00:01:33,010 future innovations. Poppe: It gives a test case for what if we got a strong enough magnetic field that perhaps 22 00:01:33,030 --> 00:01:37,170 we could produce artificially? That’s a question that remains to be answered, 23 00:01:37,190 --> 00:01:41,230 but I think that crustal magnetic fields on the moon and lunar swirls kind of provide a hint in that direction, that we might be able to learn something about. 24 00:01:41,250 --> 00:01:45,330 tone 25 00:01:45,350 --> 00:01:49,460 tone 26 00:01:49,480 --> 00:01:53,620 spacecraft beeping 27 00:01:53,640 --> 00:01:54,428 spacecraft beeping