Title of article
Modeling a magnetic Moon
Author/Authors
P.F.، Gorder, نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
-3
From page
4
To page
0
Abstract
Using an innovative computer model, Dave Stegman and his coauthors might have solved a decades-old mystery about the Moonʹs geology. A giant plume of hot rock, they say, might have burst out from the lunar core four billion years ago, kicking off a series of events that endowed the moon with a temporary magnetic field. Stegmanʹs model is prompting scientists to re-examine studies of magnetic lunar rocks collected during the early Apollo missions. The research has even caught the attention of the world media, who have dubbed his lunar hypothesis the Big Burp Theory. Notoriety aside, Stegmanʹs work is advancing the application of a popular and versatile analysis method thatʹs been around since the 1950s: finite-element analysis. With FEA, a computer breaks a complex problem into small pieces that are easier to process.
Journal title
Computing in Science and Engineering
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Computing in Science and Engineering
Record number
86510
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