Abstract

AbstractUsing new topography‐corrected spectral data from the SELENE spacecraft, here we report a new lunar crater property produced by space weathering. We find that the optical properties of north, south, east, and west walls vary systematically across the Moon; pole‐facing walls are brighter and less red (i.e., less mature) than their equator‐facing counterparts as latitude increases, which we explain by reduced solar wind flux in pole‐facing slopes. On the nearside, we find that east‐west differences in crater wall brightness and redness vary with longitude, which we explain by solar wind shielding as the Moon passes through the Earth's magnetosphere. Because micrometeoroids are largely unaffected by magnetosphere passage, the longitudinal effect is used to discriminate between micrometeoroid and solar wind effects. Thus, for the first time we quantify how surface optical properties vary with solar wind flux.

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