LingVo.club
Level
New isotope evidence on the Moon’s origin — Earth above the lunar surface

New isotope evidence on the Moon’s originCEFR B1

8 Dec 2025

Adapted from U. Chicago, Futurity CC BY 4.0

Photo by NASA, Unsplash

Level B1 – Intermediate
3 min
152 words

The Moon’s origin shaped Earth’s early environment. About 4.5 billion years ago a massive object struck the young planet and debris later formed the Moon. Scientists call that destroyed object Theia. A new study by teams from the University of Chicago, the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, and the University of Hong Kong reports evidence about Theia’s composition; the results appear in Science.

The researchers used isotopes as clues. Isotopes are small variations of elements that act like fingerprints for where material formed in the early solar system. They measured iron with high precision and combined those results with earlier isotope data for chromium, calcium, titanium, molybdenum and zirconium from terrestrial rocks, Apollo lunar samples and meteorites.

Using models of metal movement during planet formation and impact simulations, the team concluded that Theia most likely formed closer to the Sun than Earth did and may have been a neighbor planet.

Difficult words

  • originThe point or cause where something begins.
  • debrisPieces left after a crash or break.
  • isotopeAtom variant with different numbers of neutrons.
    isotopes
  • compositionThe parts or makeup of something.
  • precisionThe quality of being exact or very accurate.
  • terrestrialRelating to Earth or its land.
  • meteoriteA space rock that reached Earth's surface.
    meteorites
  • impactA collision or strong effect on something.

Tip: hover, focus or tap highlighted words in the article to see quick definitions while you read or listen.

Related articles

New isotope evidence on the Moon’s origin — English Level B1 | LingVo.club