NASA and MyMoon have teamed up to blog about everything lunar. Art, literature, music, movies, science, and everything in between!
The latest on lunar science from recent missions at the Moon. Don’t worry; we won’t hit you with big words like “siderophile” and acronyms like C.O.L.B.E.R.T., unless you want us to. Wink, wink.
Have you ever wondered if you could see the flash from a meteor impact on the Moon? How big would the impactor have to be? How fast would it have to be traveling? A MyMoon community member recently asked us this question. We asked Bill Cooke at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center this question. ...
The latest blog from The Institute's Dr. Paul Spudis: Replicators Have Arrived. ...
Let's get back up to speed. A team of high school students from Kickapoo High School in Springfield, MO conducted lunar research as part of the High School Lunar Research Projects program. The team blew away the competition and was ...
Another installment of lunar science from LPI's Dr. Paul Spudis. His latest blog is volcanically delicious. ...
The Institute's Dr. Paul Spudis discusses lunar shield volcanoes in his latest blog entry from "The Once and Future Moon."
Come home with your shield, or on it. – Spartan women to their husbands, marching off to war. ...
From NASA Headquarters - - - With this fifth release of data, striking new images and maps have been added to the already comprehensive collection of raw lunar data and high-level products, including mosaic images, that LRO has made possible. The spacecraft's seven instruments delivered more than ...
The Moon ain't what it used to be. People gush about asteroids, Mars, ...
Today is Astronomy Day, and one of the best ways to celebrate is by going ...
The mission of the Kepler Project is to discover habitable planets ...
Sorry for the late post everyone, has been a very busy week. But as for ...
The recent meteor explosion over Chelyabinsk, Russia helped bring to ...