Stresses in the lunar interior: insights from slip directions in the A01
deep moonquake nest
Abstract
We probe the present-day stresses in the lunar interior by examining the
slip directions of moonquakes in the A01 nest. In this nest, some deep
moonquakes appear to slip ‘backwards’, in the opposite direction to
other events. We assess whether these changes in slip direction result
from a spatial variation in the tectonic stress or from a temporal
variation in the tidal stress. To test these two options, we first show
that a dominant tectonic stress implies deep moonquakes can only slip in
one direction: forwards and backwards, while a dominant tidal stress
could allow moonquakes to slip in more directions: any combination of
forwards, backwards, left, and right. Then we look for the number of
slip directions; we separate the deep moonquake waveforms into slip
directions using a principal component analysis technique. We find two
slip directions present in the A01 deep moonquake nest. The moonquakes
slip in a variety of directions as time evolves. This observation
implies that the tidal stresses drive deep moonquakes. Additionally,
these results place a new constraint on the magnitude of the tectonic
stresses at depth; they must be smaller than the modelled tidal stress
of ~ 0.1 MPa.