The origin of the Moon within a terrestrial synestia
Simon J. Lock, Sarah T. Stewart, Michail I. Petaev, Zoe M. Leinhardt,, Mia T. Mace, Stein B. Jacobsen, Matija \'Cuk

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new lunar origin model involving a high-energy impact creating a synestia, which explains the Moon's composition and formation process more comprehensively than previous theories.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of a lunar-forming synestia formed by giant impacts, providing a new paradigm for understanding the Moon's origin and composition.
Findings
Synestia formation occurs from super-CoRoL impacts.
Moonlets form within the cooling synestia and match lunar composition.
The model explains isotopic similarity between Earth and Moon.
Abstract
The giant impact hypothesis remains the leading theory for lunar origin. However, current models struggle to explain the Moon's composition and isotopic similarity with Earth. Here we present a new lunar origin model. High-energy, high-angular momentum giant impacts can create a post-impact structure that exceeds the corotation limit (CoRoL), which defines the hottest thermal state and angular momentum possible for a corotating body. In a typical super-CoRoL body, traditional definitions of mantle, atmosphere and disk are not appropriate, and the body forms a new type of planetary structure, named a synestia. Using simulations of cooling synestias combined with dynamic, thermodynamic and geochemical calculations, we show that satellite formation from a synestia can produce the main features of our Moon. We find that cooling drives mixing of the structure, and condensation generates…
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