The farside of the moon, as photographed by Apollo 13, hangs upside-down over the blackness of space.

Since it first landed in 2018, China’s Chang’e-4 — the first spacecraft to ever land on the far side of the moon — has been taking stunning panoramas of impact craters and sampling minerals from the moon’s mantle.

China's rover maps 1,000 feet of hidden 'structures' deep below the dark side of the moon comes via ChinaTechNews.com.