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Forever hidden from Earth's observers, it has been shrouded in myths for centuries. The first photos, mysterious craters, and basaltic seas — what does the side we never see live by?

The Moon has always been a close yet unreachable companion. But the far side of the Moon, hidden from human eyes by synchronous rotation, remained a symbol of the unknown until the mid-20th century. Today, we know more about this hemisphere than ever before — but it is still where the greatest mysteries of Earth's natural satellite lie.

≈ 41%
the surface of the Moon is never visible from Earth

Why Can't We See It?

The reason is the so-called synchronous (tidal) capture. The Moon orbits Earth with the same period as it rotates around its own axis. The period of rotation coincides with the period of orbital motion, so from Earth, only one hemisphere is always visible. The far side is constantly facing away from us. This is not a shadow, not eternal night — it receives just as much sunlight as the visible side. Just its rays never reach the observer on Earth.

Early Legends and Hypotheses

Before the space age, the far side of the Moon was an absolute terra incognita. Some astronomers speculated that there might be an atmosphere, water, or even unknown forms of life there. Science fiction depicted scenes of lost lunar civilizations. It was only in 1959 that the Soviet automatic station "Luna-3" made a historic flyby and transmitted the first images. Humanity first saw what had been hidden for billions of years.

October 7, 1959 — "Luna-3" took 29 photographs covering about 70% of the far side. The quality was low, but there was no doubt: the relief was completely different.

Key Distinction: Thin Crust, Mountains, and Almost No Seas

The first thing that surprised scientists was that there are almost no lunar seas on the far side, extensive dark areas filled with solidified basaltic lava. If on the visible side "oceans" and "seas" occupy about 31% of the surface, then on the far side their share is only 1–2%. The reason is related to the different thickness of the lunar crust. On the far side, the crust is significantly thicker, and basaltic magma could not reach the surface to form smooth dark plains.

Instead, mountains, craters, and the largest known impact structure in the Solar System — the South Pole-Aitken basin — dominate on the far side. The diameter of this gigantic crater is about 2500 kilometers, and its depth up to 13 kilometers. Many mountain peaks on the far side are higher than those visible from Earth.

"The Dark Side of the Moon" — A Misleading Translation and Legacy of Pink Floyd

The expression "the dark side of the Moon" is often used for the far side. However, this is incorrect from an astronomical point of view. The far side is not dark — it receives sunlight during lunar days. The popularization of the term was facilitated by the cult album of Pink Floyd "The Dark Side of the Moon." Although the musicians invested a philosophical meaning in the name, the mythological nuance has settled on the reverse hemisphere.

Soviet and Chinese Missions: How They Explored the Invisible

After "Luna-3," the Soviet Union continued its research. The "Zond-3" (1965), "Luna-12" (1966), and the series of orbital stations "Luna-10," "Luna-12," "Luna-14" accumulated detailed images. However, it was not until 2019 that a new era in human history began: the Chinese probe "Chang'e-4" made the first soft landing on the far side of the Moon. The landing site was the Carman crater inside the South Pole-Aitken basin. The landing module and rover "Yutu-2" have been working there until now, studying geology and radiation conditions.

Why Study the Far Side?

The far side of the Moon is an ideal location for radio astronomy. It is constantly shielded from Earth's radio noise, allowing observations in the low-frequency range, inaccessible from Earth due to the atmosphere and interference. Chinese engineers deployed the first experimental radio telescope in the crater Dager. In addition, the structure of the far side's crust holds keys to the early history of the Solar System: there are fewer signs of volcanic processing here, and the rock layers are older than those in the basaltic seas.

South Pole – Aitken Basin — age about 4.2 billion years. Its study may shed light on the era of heavy bombardment.

Myths About an Alien Base and a Spaceship

Before the first photos, the far side was an ideal place for conspiracy theories. Stories were told about a secret Nazi base on the Moon, fragments of an alien spaceship, and even a secret American mission. But all the images obtained since 1959 show a barren, crater-covered rocky desert. No artificial structures or anomalies have been detected by orbiting spacecraft.

The Future: The Next Stop — Even Further

The far side of the Moon remains a priority target. China plans the "Chang'e-6" mission to deliver soil from the South Pole-Aitken basin. Russia, within the framework of its lunar program, is considering the possibility of landing in the Boguslavsky crater area. The construction of the first inhabited base on the Moon may also involve the far side, if the low-frequency radio interferometer requires complete silence. However, the engineering challenges are great: communication with the far side is only possible through satellite relay stations, such as the Chinese "Queqiao" ("Magpie Bridge").

The first person to step onto the far side of the Moon will take a step into an absolutely silent world — without direct radio communication with Earth, without the familiar view of the native planet in the sky.

Conclusion: Not Dark, But Still Mysterious

The far side of the Moon has stopped being invisible, but it has not stopped surprising. The thick crust, the absence of seas, the grandiose impact structures, and the scientific potential make it a unique laboratory. Space agencies are looking at it more and more actively, and perhaps in the coming decades, humans will finally step onto these edges — where the Earth never rises above the horizon.


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The Dark Side of the Moon // Delhi: India (ELIB.ORG.IN). Updated: 28.04.2026. URL: https://elib.org.in/m/articles/view/The-Dark-Side-of-the-Moon (date of access: 16.06.2026).

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