Journey Beyond the Surface
Moon craters are bowl-shaped depressions formed by asteroid and comet impacts over billions of years. These celestial scars range from tiny pits to massive basins hundreds of kilometers wide. Without atmosphere or geological activity to erode them, lunar craters remain perfectly preserved, creating a timeless record of our solar system's violent history.
The largest craters, called impact basins, were created by collisions so powerful they melted the Moon's crust. Famous craters like Tycho, with its brilliant ray system, and the massive South Pole-Aitken Basin showcase the incredible forces that have shaped our nearest neighbor in space.
Discover formations that shaped worlds across the cosmos.
Venture into uncharted territories with cutting-edge technology.
Every crater tells a billion-year-old tale of cosmic collision.