News

Scientists have discovered a “structure” below the moon’s surface that is nearly 200 miles ... and is located beneath a large crater in the vicinity of the lunar south pole.
However, the South Pole is not the only part of the Moon hiding huge curious structures underneath its surface. Astronomers announced the discovery of a massive heat-emitting mass under the ...
The Moon has been a subject of awe and fascination ... one of the largest preserved craters in the Solar System – is a structure which weighs at least 2.18 billion kilogrammes and measures ...
A large mass of granite that has been slowly releasing heat has been discovered buried underneath a crater on the Moon. This is not science fiction, it's ancient volcanism. The Moon used to have ...
A picture of the moon’s south pole was taken in May by Resilience, a robotic lander operated by the Japanese company Ispace ...
El Capitan and Half Dome, in Yosemite in California are examples of similar granite rocks which have risen to the surface". Finding such a large amount of granite opens the possibility of similar ...
Chinese scientists were able to look more deeply into the moon's far side "hidden structures" below the surface with the help ... found that was formed when a large object hit the moon.
An exhaustive examination of lunar gravity using data obtained by two NASA robotic spacecraft is offering new clues about why the two sides of the moon - the one perpetually facing Earth and the other ...
Although artificial structures ... all over the moon. The moon's surface is littered with pits or skylights like this one called, Marius Hill (shown in three images above under different sun ...
We tend to think of the moon as a cold ... 355ºK (82°C or just under 180°F), at least 20ºK higher than predicted. However, barely a meter away, the surface temperature was only 332ºK ...
The Yutu-2 is able to send radio signals that penetrate through the moon’s surface using LPR equipment ... It is believed this lava was produced by large structures, like asteroids, hitting ...