Glowing like a silent guardian in the night sky, the moon is the fifth-largest satellite in the solar system and orbits Earth at an average distance of approximately 384,399 kilometres. With a diameter of about 3,474 kilometres—roughly one-quarter that of Earth—it exerts only one-sixth of our planet"s gravity. This is why astronauts famously bounce when they walk on its surface. The moon"s surface is mostly covered with rock and fine lunar dust, created by billions of years of impacts from meteoroids and micrometeorites. This powdery material, called regolith, gives the moon its grey, dusty appearance.
Photo of the moons surface through a telescope
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Purple crocus flowers, Seven Rila Lakes, Bulgaria
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Shark Fin Cove, California, USA
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Saranac Lake, New York
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Radcliffe Camera and All Souls College, University of Oxford, England
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Asian swallowtail butterfly
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A pine forest in Alsace, France
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Everglades National Park, Florida, USA
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World Space Week
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Black-and-white ruffed lemur
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Alte Brücke Bridge, Frankfurt, Germany
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Saguaro National Park, Arizona, United State
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Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness
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Koala sleeping in a eucalyptus tree
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Pont Alexandre III, Paris, France
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Northern gannets, Shetland Islands, Scotland
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Wheatear, Peak District National Park, England
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Luna moth
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Grianan of Aileach ring fort, Donegal, Ireland
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Ocracoke Lighthouse on Ocracoke Island, North Carolina, USA
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Lagazzuolo Lake, Valmalenco, Lombardy, Italy
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Harbour and longtail boats at Ko Samui, Thailand
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Moose, Denali National Park, Alaska, United States
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Rio de Janeiro Botanical Garden, Brazil
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A delta in the Venetian Lagoon, Italy
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Avalanche Lake Trail at Adirondack High Peaks, New York, United States
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Tree frog, Costa Rica
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Pygmy three-toed sloth
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Bing Wallpaper Gallery

