From lighting up our skies to maintaining a geological record of our solar system’s history, Earth’s closest celestial neighbor plays a pivotal role in the study of our planet and our solar system.
The Moon makes Earth more livable by moderating our home planet’s wobble on its axis, leading to a relatively stable climate. It also causes tides, creating a rhythm that has guided humans for thousands of years.
Observers on Earth can track the Moon’s motion in space (relative to Earth and the Sun) through moon phases, supermoons and eclipses.
Explainer
What You Need To Know About the March 2025 Total Lunar Eclipse
On the night of March 13 or early in the morning of March 14, depending on time zone, the Moon will pass into Earth’s shadow and appear to turn red. Here’s what you need to know.
NASA’s interactive map for observing the Moon each day of the year.
Moon Observation Journal
Spend the next month getting to know the Moon.
International Observe the Moon Night
You’re invited! Learn more and see how people around the world #ObserveTheMoon together.
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter ImagE:
Far Side of the Moon
The Moon's far side gets as much sunlight as its near side.
Like Earth, the Moon has a day side and a night side, which change as the Moon rotates. The Sun always illuminates half of the Moon while the other half remains dark.
NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) mission has mapped the entire lunar surface, including the Moon’s near and far sides, down to a scale of one meter.