Moon dust is sharp, corrosive, and potentially fatal. NASA’s new electric force field shield is designed to blast it away.
NASA’s Artemis II mission is rolling toward the launch pad, marking a major step toward humanity’s next journey around the ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
NASA scientist looked into 50-year-old moon dirt, here’s what he found
Clues buried in Moon dust are helping scientists revisit one of the oldest questions: where did Earth’s water come from? For ...
Green Matters on MSN
The Moon Is Lopsided, and a Rare Lunar Rock May Help Explain Why
The near side of the Moon, which faces the Earth, is thinner, while the mysterious far side is crammed with thick layers of ...
Morning Overview on MSN
New NASA Artemis payloads to probe moon’s terrain, radiation, and origins
NASA is quietly reshaping how we will understand the Moon, selecting a trio of new Artemis science payloads that target its ...
A new NASA study using Apollo lunar soil samples challenges a long-held theory. It suggests meteorites were not the primary ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Earth's moon is believed to have formed from an ancient impact. Could some of our planet's oldest ...
American geologist and astronaut Harrison Hagan Schmitt takes rock samples from the surface of the moon during America's last lunar landing mission of the 20th century, Apollo 17, December 1972.
The Artemis 2 astronauts—and the historical keepsakes they’re bringing with them—will travel farther from Earth than any have ...
U.S. astronauts who return to the moon’s surface in the years ahead for the first time in more than half a century will have the difficult and unprecedented task of setting the stage for a permanent ...
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