New Scientist: Forming moon may have taken three big impacts early in Earth’s history
Multiple impacts on Earth might better explain our moon’s origin than a single giant impact 4.5 billion years ago – and could help solve one of its biggest mysteries. But Earth and the moon are ...
Forming moon may have taken three big impacts early in Earth’s history
AOL: Astronomers now say the moon is eating up molecules from Earth’s atmosphere
Solar wind, in combination with Earth's magnetic field, has been delivering particles from our planet's atmosphere to the moon's surface for billions of year, as illustrated here. - Shubhonkar ...
Astronomers now say the moon is eating up molecules from Earth’s atmosphere
About 4.5 billion years ago, a colossal impact between the young Earth and a mysterious planetary body called Theia changed everything—reshaping Earth, forming the Moon, and scattering clues across ...
A research paper published on , in the journal Science Advances identifies a previously unrecognized zone of reduced galactic cosmic ray exposure in the space between Earth and the Moon.
The Moon is not a fixed lantern in the sky but a slow-moving partner that is gradually edging away from Earth. That retreat is tiny on human timescales, yet over millions and billions of years it ...
Smithsonian Magazine: See the Awe-Inspiring New Photos of the Moon and Earth Sent Back From the Artemis 2 Mission
See the Awe-Inspiring New Photos of the Moon and Earth Sent Back From the Artemis 2 Mission
WESH: What was the Artemis II crew looking at on the moon? Search our 3D model