The moon is not just gray, new images show: ‘Real color differences’
Once in a blue moon might be more common than we thought.
New images show that our moon is way more colorful than just shades of gray. Instead, the orbital rock was observed to show tints of both blue and red.
The European Space Agency’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer — abbreviated to Juice — snapped hue-filled photos of the lunar surface before it returned to Earth Tuesday.
They were taken from the craft’s Janus camera recently during a historic flyby of both the Earth and moon before plotting a course toward Venus in 2025 and Jupiter in 2031.
“The image shows some sign of real color differences in the large-scale features on the lunar surface,” the agency announced.
