The Brighterside of News on MSN
Moon's largest impact crater helps explain why the near side and far side look so different
As astronauts prepare for south-polar landings, a new look at the Moon’s biggest crater points to a pivotal moment in lunar ...
China’s newly confirmed largest impact crater from the Holocene reveals rare geological evidence of a massive ...
Could Artemis III astronauts collect some lunar samples that shed light on the moon's mysterious past? That's what a team of researchers hope.
The gravitational interaction between the Earth and Moon has led to one hemisphere of the Moon being locked facing away from ...
Scientists verify China’s Jinlin crater in Guangdong as Earth’s largest Holocene impact site, measuring 900 meters wide and ...
A new study reveals that the largest lunar crater, South Pole-Aitken basin, was formed by an oblique impact that shaped the ...
The Jinlin impact crater in south China’s Guangdong Province has been confirmed as the largest known crater on Earth since the Holocene period, which spans from 11,700 years ago to the present, the ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Moon’s biggest crater reveals the secret of its two faces
Recent research has shed light on the role of the Moon’s largest impact crater in explaining the stark visual and geological ...
Futurism on MSN
There’s Something Really Strange About the Moon’s Largest Crater, Where NASA Astronauts Are Due to Land
The findings could help explain why the Moon’s far side is riddled with large craters, while the more explored near side is ...
Solving a lunar mystery? Scientist at the University of Arizona is the lead author on research proposing a new theory for the ...
New Scientist on MSN
The moon's largest crater didn't form in the way we thought
The impact that carved out the South Pole-Aitken basin on the moon appears to have come from the north, not the south as ...
Live Science on MSN
We were wrong about how the moon's largest and oldest crater formed — and that's great news for NASA's next lunar landing
A new study has revealed that our understanding of the South Pole-Aitken basin was quite literally back-to-front, meaning ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results