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  • [ ♪ Intro ]

  • The moon is our planet's constant, dependable companion.

  • Whether it's waxing, waning, or shining in its full glory, it always presents the same face to Earth:

  • a mottled, monochrome landscape of black and white rocks.

  • Depending on where you are in the world, you might see different things in that great inkblot in the sky.

  • Some see the smiling face of the 'Man in the Moon'.

  • Others might see a rabbit stirring a pot of medicine.

  • But whatever you make of it, that pattern is always the same.

  • That's because the moon is tidally locked to the Earth:

  • gravitational forces between the two have slowed the moon's spin,

  • so it takes exactly the same amount of time to complete a full rotation as it does to orbit the Earth.

  • That's given us plenty of time to examine this side facing us,

  • but nobody knew what was on the far side until relatively recently.

  • Turns out it's very different from the side we normally see.

  • And astronomers are still working to pin down how that happened.

  • The mysterious, unseen side of the moon is sometimes called the dark side,

  • thanks, Pink Floyd, but it isn't always dark.

  • During a new moon, and when all we can see from Earth are those toenail crescent slivers,

  • the sun is positioned behind the moon, lighting up the far side and leaving the side facing us dark instead.

  • But it is dark from a knowledge point of view.

  • Because of that rigid tidal locking, we'll never be able to see the far side from the surface of the Earth.

  • To do that, you have to physically fling something around the back of it.

  • Fortunately, 60 years ago, flinging things around the moon was an integral part of the space race.

  • Although the US was the first to put an actual person on the moon,

  • it was the Russians who led the space race at the beginning,

  • and in 1959, their Luna 3 spacecraft became the first to visit and take pictures of the far side.

  • But you couldn't just snap a digital photo back then.

  • When Luna's cameras detected the sunlit far side of the moon,

  • they took photos using actual physical film.

  • The negatives were then developed within the spacecraft and passed to a scanner,

  • which shone a light through the image in 1000 horizontal lines and transmitted it back to Earth as an analog signal, like a fax.

  • The image was blurry and low-res, which isn't too surprising if you remember what faxes used to be like.

  • But it was our first glimpse of a totally unknown lunar surface,

  • and it was immediately obvious that the far side was completely different from the side we're used to seeing.

  • Where the near side is covered in dark patches, the far side was much brighter,

  • with just two small black spots.

  • Since then, many more spacecraft have flung themselves around the moon to get a better look at its "dark side,"

  • and collected all kinds of data, from high resolution images to altitude and density readings.

  • And with all that data, scientists can now clearly see the differences between the near and far sides in incredible detail.

  • As that blurry Luna 3 image suggested,

  • while the near side is covered with vast plains of dark lava, the far side has very few.

  • Instead, it's a rugged cratered highland landscape of a type of light-colored rock that's rich in calcium.

  • Elevation maps also reveal something that's not easy to see from the pictures:

  • one of the largest craters in the solar system.

  • The South Pole-Aitken crater covers a huge area of the southern hemisphere on the far side,

  • around 2500 kilometers in diameter and 13 kilometers deep.

  • And even more surprisingly, measurements of the density of rocks beneath the lunar surface

  • showed that the moon's crust is up to 35 kilometers thicker on the far side,

  • compared to the side that faces us.

  • That was surprising, to say the least.

  • With the Earth and other rotating planets as examples,

  • we had reason to think that you'd get the same kinds of features on all sides of a planetary body.

  • But it turns out that's not always a thing!

  • Today, with detailed images of planets and moons all over the solar system,

  • we know that the idea of a two-faced world isn't unique.

  • Mars has radically different northern and southern hemispheres,

  • Pluto is adorned with a huge, heart-shaped birthmark over one side,

  • and Iapetus, a moon of Saturn, is truly two-toned,

  • with dark-colored dust smeared over one hemisphere of its icy white surface.

  • And yet, the reasons for the differences between the near and far sides of the moon remain something of a mystery.

  • It's hard to reconstruct a 4.5 billion year history, even of our closest neighbor.

  • But like most mysteries, scientists have some ideas!

  • The difference in the number of lava plains, for instance, is probably tied to that uneven crust.

  • Some researchers think that in the early days of the solar system,

  • while the Earth and Moon were still forming, a massive asteroid struck the thick crust on the far side,

  • creating that gigantic South Pole-Aitken crater.

  • Later impacts all over the moon left craters on the far side,

  • but were able to pierce the thinner crust on the near side,

  • unleashing a flood of lava that filled the craters they left behind.

  • The lava cooled, and the Earth-facing side of the moon was left with a permanent scar,

  • its mottled face.

  • But that doesn't explain why the crust was thicker on one side in the first place,

  • or why the South Pole impact didn't send the moon shooting off into space.

  • With government agencies and private companies starting to set their sights on the moon again,

  • hopefully we'll get more data that will help us figure that out.

  • Luna 3's photos of the far side of the moon were probably the first major lunar revelation of the space age.

  • But nearly 60 years later, we still have a lot more secrets to uncover.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space!

  • And thanks especially to our community on patreon:

  • your support is what allows us to keep diving into the amazingly weird history of space exploration

  • and the most mind-boggling aspects of the universe.

  • If you're not yet a patron and want to learn more,

  • you can check out patreon.com/scishow.

  • [ ♪ Outro ]

[ ♪ Intro ]

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