Earth and moon
The crescent Earth rises above the lunar horizon in this undated NASA handout photograph taken from the Apollo 17 spacecraft in lunar orbit during the final lunar landing mission in the Apollo program. December 13, 2012 marks the 50th anniversary of the last manned lunar trip. Photo obtained by Reuters December 13, 2012. Reuters/NASA/Handout

The Earth is actually two planets, according to US scientists. A research team from the University of California, Los Angeles, claimed that the Earth became what it is today when it collided by a “planetary” embryo called Theia approximately 100 million years after the Earth formed.

The concept isn’t new; scientists already believed that the crash was also responsible for the formation of the moon. However, UCLA geochemists now determined that it was less of side-swipe collision, but more of a powerful and high-speed head-on assault of Earth and Theia more than 4.5 billion years ago.

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Instead of Theia continuing off into space after side-swiping Earth, which has been previously thought, Theia never left the Earth. New evidence published in the journal Science on Jan. 29 reveals the collision resulted in Theia fusing with Earth, which led to the planet that we have today and to the formation of the moon. Theia did not just grazed Earth at an angle of 45 degrees or more; it head-on collided with the relatively young planet with a violent impact.

The team analysed seven lunar rocks brought by the Apollo missions 12, 15 and 17, as well as six volcanic rocks from the Earth’s mantle found in Hawaii and Arizona in the US. The scientists did not find any difference in the oxygen isotopes of the rocks, establishing that the lunar rocks and the volcanic rocks shared chemical signatures.

If Theia only scratched the Earth and produced the moon, the moon would be primarily made of Theia. That would also mean the rocks found in the moon and the rocks found on Earth would have different oxygen isotope ratios. However, the scientists did not find any difference between the rocks.

“Theia was thoroughly mixed into both the Earth and the moon, and evenly dispersed between them,” lead author and UCLA professor of geochemistry and cosmochemistry Edward Young said. “This explains why we don’t see a different signature of Theia in the moon versus the Earth.”

Theia now makes up large parts of the Earth and the moon. If it had not collided with Earth, it would probably have become a planet. Young and other scientists believe Theia was the same size of Earth, while others believe it was smaller, more like the size of Mars.

The head-on collision theory was first proposed by Matija Ćuk, currently a research scientist with the SETI Institute, and Sarah Steward, a professor at UC Davis, in 2012. The same was separately proposed by Robin Canup of the Southwest Research Institute in the same year.

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