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Earth's magnetic field may move tiny air particles to the Moon — a close up of a circular object with a toothbrush in it

Earth's magnetic field may move tiny air particles to the MoonCEFR A2

17 Dec 2025

Adapted from Lindsey Valich-Rochester, Futurity CC BY 4.0

Photo by Tomohiro Amaha, Unsplash

Level A2 – High beginner / Elementary
2 min
113 words

New research suggests Earth's magnetic field has helped move tiny particles from our atmosphere onto the lunar surface. Soil returned by the Apollo missions shows the moon contains volatiles such as water, carbon dioxide, helium, argon and nitrogen. Some volatiles come from the solar wind, but the amount of nitrogen is higher than the solar wind alone can explain.

Scientists used advanced computer simulations to test two cases: an early Earth without a magnetic field and a modern Earth with a strong field. The simulations show the transfer works best in the modern case, where charged particles are knocked loose and guided along field lines that can reach the moon over long times.

Difficult words

  • volatilesubstance that can become gas easily
    volatiles
  • solar windstream of particles from the Sun
  • simulationcomputer model that copies real events
    simulations
  • fieldarea where a force acts, like magnetism
    magnetic field
  • particlevery small piece of matter or material
    particles
  • atmospherelayer of gases around a planet

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Earth's magnetic field may move tiny air particles to the Moon — English Level A2 | LingVo.club