The lunar impact flash - an explosion of light caused by something hitting the Moon's surface - was captured on Friday.
Morning Overview on MSN
Mystery moon flashes may finally have an explanation
The Moon’s surface sometimes flickers with sudden flashes of light, brief glows and color changes that have puzzled ...
A large mass of granite that has been slowly releasing heat has been discovered buried beneath a crater on the Moon. This is ...
Apollo lunar samples show how space weathering alters the Moon’s surface over time, affecting ultraviolet light reflection and interpretation of Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter data.
The moon's surface may be more than just a dusty, barren landscape. Over billions of years, tiny particles from Earth's ...
NASA has just revealed enormous cracks, or grabens, on the Moon that show how the Mare Humorum fractured billions of years ...
It may be renowned for its crater-scarred surface, but researchers say the moon actually only shows about half of the number of impacts it has received. They came to the conclusion after finding a ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Ancient heat source found beneath the moon’s surface, and it has been active for billions of years!
A large mass of granite, located beneath the Compton and Belkovich craters on the Moon, has been slowly emitting heat for ...
Map shows every slope on the moon to 100-metre scale First-ever detailed map of topography of moon Will help plan future manned and robotic missions to moon A NASA camera that produces completely ...
The moon turned itself inside out to to form the cratered surface we see today, according to scientists. Researchers combined computer simulations and data to show how oceans of magma sank and rose to ...
THE first-ever geological map of the Moon has been created – revealing the lunar surface in never-before-seen detail. Nasa will be able to use the colourful new map to plan future missions to the Moon ...
The Moon's surface was once an ocean of hot, slushy magma. That's according to some new research by the University of Cambridge which says that the Moon's bumpy surface could be the way it is because ...
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