Researchers analyzing lunar samples have found something unexpected: natural few-layer graphene, a form of carbon that could reshape our understanding of the Moon’s formation and geological evolution.
Using the Yutu-2 rover and Lunar Penetrating Radar (LPR), scientists have mapped over 1,000 feet of lunar geology, revealing previously inaccessible layers of volcanic rock, dust, and impact craters.
Using samples gathered from the Chang’e-6 mission, scientists found that the interior of the moon on the half we never see from Earth might be drier than the near side. By Katrina Miller Katrina ...