Moon’s far side interior is cooler than near side, study finds

Published October 1, 2025
VIEWS of the moon’s near side (left) and far side (right), put together from observations made by Nasa’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. — Reuters
VIEWS of the moon’s near side (left) and far side (right), put together from observations made by Nasa’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. — Reuters

WASHINGTON: The moon is sometimes called “two-faced” because the surface of its side perpetually facing away from Earth looks so different than its side always facing our planet.

And the differences run deeper than that, as shown by an analysis of rock and soil retrieved in 2024 by China’s Chang’e-6 robotic lunar spacecraft.

Scientists said the chemical makeup of the minerals in the material obtained from a location on the moon’s farside sho­wed it formed from lava within the lunar mantle about 60 miles (100 km) under the surface some 2.8 billion years ago, crystallising at a temperature of about 2,000 deg­rees Fahrenheit (1,100 deg­rees Celsius). They com­pared that to data on previously studied samples of rock that crystallised in the nearside mantle.

It turns out that the Chang’e-6 sample, the only one ever gotten from the farside, formed in the lunar interior at a temperature about 180°F (100°C) cooler than the 33 samples previously ret­r­ieved from the nearside during Nasa Apollo missions and by a Chinese spacecraft in 2020. The researchers said they believe this difference between the two sides persists to this day.

“Our results demonstrate the existence of thermal asymmetry bet­ween the nearside and farside mantle,” said geoscientist Yang Li of University College London and Pek­ing University, who led the study published in the journal Nature Geoscience.

“This takes us one step closer toward understanding the dichotomy of the moon. Specifically, the moon has a dramatic difference for the two sides at its surface, such as volcanism, crust thickness and topography,” Li added.

The farside possesses a thicker crust — the outermost layer of the planet — and is more mountainous and cratered. It appears that this side was less volcanic in the past than the nearside, so it has fewer dark patches of basalt, a type of rock formed from lava long ago. The surface of the nearside is smoother and mostly covered in dark volcanic plains.

The moon, like Earth, formed about 4.5 billion years ago. Volcanism on the moon, Earth and other planetary bodies involves the eruption of molten rock from the mantle — the layer just under the crust — onto the surface. The Chang’e-6 landing site in the South Pole-Aitken Basin, an impact crater, is an area with the thinnest crust on the moon, helpful for finding evidence concerning volcanism.

Chang’e-6 used a scoop and drill to obtain material after arriving on the lunar surface in June 2024, then returned it to Earth, landing in the Chinese region of Inner Mongolia. Because of Earth’s gravitational pull, the moon always shows the same side to our planet — tidally locked, in scientific terms. But the differences in temperature in the interior may not have anything to do with this.

The researchers hypothesise that the interior of the moon’s farside may be cooler than the nearside as a result of having a smaller amount of elements such as uranium, thorium and potassium that release heat due to radioactive decay.

Some scientists have hypothesised that this uneven distribution of such elements within the moon may have been cau­sed when a massive asteroid or some other celestial body smashed into the farside early in lunar history.

Published in Dawn, October 1st, 2025

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