Science
NASA spacecraft snaps mysterious 'surfboard' orbiting the moon. What is it?
NASA's lunar orbiter has captured images of a surfboard-shaped object zooming past the moon.
The close encounter wasn't a UFO or an alien megastructure. Rather, NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spotted South Korea's lunar orbiter Danuri zipping by as the two spacecraft circled the moon, NASA officials said in a statement.
Because the two spacecraft were "traveling in nearly parallel orbits," the LRO operations team at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland took the opportunity to snap photos of the event, which unfolded between March 5 and 6.
LRO's camera has a very short exposure time of about 0.338 milliseconds, making the event difficult to capture. However, it still managed to get photos of Danuri, the first Korean spacecraft to enter lunar orbit, which it achieved in December 2022.
However, because of the speed difference between the two spacecraft — roughly 7,200 mph (11,500 km/h) — the resulting image makes Danuri appear to be "smeared to 10 times its size." This stretching effect causes it to resemble a flat surfboard.
Related: See a SpaceX rocket photobomb the moon in incredible award-winning shot
In reality, Danuri looks nothing like a surfboard; it's a box-shaped spacecraft with two solar panels attached to each side.
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