Mercury's water ice may have been deposited by a larger, slower impac… | HappeningNow.news
Published Date: July 08, 2026

Science · 1 views

Mercury's water ice may have been deposited by a larger, slower impactor than previously thought—in only one day

The source of the significant water ice deposits hidden in Mercury's polar regions has been a topic of debate among researchers.

Source Phys.org AI Summary Updated May 26, 2026
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Freshness Stale Updated May 26, 2026
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Read time 1 min ~91 words

AI Summary

The source of the significant water ice deposits hidden in Mercury's polar regions has been a topic of debate among researchers. A new study, published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, suggests that these deposits were accumulated in only one Mercurian day (176 Earth days) by a large impactor, such as a comet or asteroid. While previous studies have suggested a similar scenario, this is the first study to fully model the impact. Furthermore, these new models suggest that the impactor may have been larger and slower than previously suggested.

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