Researchers at the Swedish Institute of Space Physics and Umea University in Sweden made use of the particle instrument SARA (Sub-keV Atoms Reflecting Analyser) that travelled to the Moon on board the Indian satellite Chandrayaan-1 in 2008.
The solar wind is a continuous flow of plasma from the Sun which affects the planets in the Solar System and contributes to causing aurora on Earth.
The lunar atmosphere, on the other hand, is too thin to show the same phenomenon and the Moon also lacks a global magnetic field to regulate the solar wind.
However, the researchers found evidence that the surface of the Moon, and also local magnetic fields of the lunar crust, reflect some of the solar wind.
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"This knowledge is of great importance to the lunar space environment which is affected both on the lunar dayside and nightside surfaces," said Charles Lue, a researcher at Swedish Institute of Space Physics.
The reflected solar wind ions move in spiralling tracks that can take them from the lunar dayside, where the solar wind strikes first, to the nightside of the Moon.
"The effects can even be seen in the form of visible light - like bright swirls imprinted on the surface of the moon," Lue said.
"The observations help us map and understand the variations in the lunar space environment. They also give us clues about the physical processes involved and the long-term effects they have on the lunar surface," he added.