The Moon’s farside has sticky soil

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The Moon’s farside has sticky soil, Yutu-2 finds

The dirt tends to get stuck to the rover’s wheels in clods, but hasn’t hindered the rover yet.
RELATED TOPICS: MOON | CHINA
Yutu-2 rolls off the Chang'e 4 lander onto the lunar surface in January 2019.
Yutu-2 rolls off the Chang’e 4 lander onto the lunar surface in January 2019. CNSA

The farside of the Moon is a far different place from the nearside. It has a more rugged surface, chock-full of craters. It’s nearly devoid of the smooth, solidified-lava oceans that dot the side that faces us. And it has a different composition, with fewer radioactive elements.

Now, you can add “stickier soil” to that list.

In a paper published Jan. 19 in Science Robotics, Chinese researchers give an update on the Yutu-2 rover, which touched down on the Moon in 2019 with Chang’e 4, the first ever mission to land on the lunar farside.

The team says that one of the most striking things Yutu-2 has encountered is how clumpy, or “cloddy,” the lunar soil has been. Images taken by the Chang’e 4 lander and the rover of its wheels show that much of its fine metal mesh is covered in dirt that it has picked up as it rolled across the lunar surface.

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