These channels (also called "lava tubes") are what is left of the several volcanoes that were once active on the satellite, and scientists have been long seeking them out.
The announcement that at least one lava tube could exist in a lunar region called Marius Hills was finally made on Thursday at the 47th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC) in Texas. Astronomers used data from NASA's Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) — a space probe that is mapping the satellite's gravitational field variation with extreme detail.
By analyzing lunar gravity, the team realized that lava once ran between two rilles in the Marius region, next to a crater.
This was possible because the gravitational pull of a material is stronger the higher the material's density. When the GRAIL space probe flew over the alleged lava tube — which if hollow, would be less dense — it detected a decrease in gravitational attraction compatible with the presence of an underground cavity.
Sood: Marius hills skylight may be entry to lava tube. Using GRAIL to look for gravity anomaly to test #LPSC2016 pic.twitter.com/XCDSM8GQkl
— Cosmo Quest (@cosmoquestX) March 22, 2016
According to the team, GRAIL also detected at least ten other possible "gravitational signatures" that could point to the presence of lava tubes in various regions across the Moon.
This is great news for enthusiasts of space colonization. If the human race is ever to move en masse to the Moon, it will not be able to just settle on the surface, due to the lack of atmosphere, breathable air, and the presence of harmful sun radiation.
Creating underground cities in one of these large tunnels — which according to some experts could be up to one kilometer wide — would be a perfect temporary solution to protect earthlings from extreme temperatures and bad sunlight. They could even be pressurized, like giant space stations, to provide citizens with oxygen. Cosmists should all root for lava tubes.