Washington [US]: While there are numerous hypotheses regarding the formation of the Earth and the Moon, most of them include a massive collision. They vary from a model where the impacting object strikes the newly formed Earth a glancing blow and then escapes, to one where the collision is so energetic that both the impactor and the Earth are vaporized.
Now scientists at the University of Leeds and the University of Chicago have analysed the dynamics of fluids and electrically conducting fluids and concluded that the Earth must have been magnetized either before the impact or as a result of it. They claim this could help to narrow down the theories of the Earth-Moon formation and inform future research into what really happened.
Professor David Hughes, an applied mathematician in the School of Mathematics at the University of Leeds, said: "Our new idea is to point out that our theoretical understanding of the Earth's magnetic field today can actually tell us something about the very formation of the Earth-Moon system. "At first glance, this seems somewhat surprising, and previous theories had not recognized this potentially important connection."
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