An illustration showing how the gamma-ray cavity forms near Earth's magnetic field. (Image credit: Shang et al., Sci. Adv. 12, eadv1908) Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Sign up for the Live Science daily newsletter now Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.
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Explore An account already exists for this email address, please log in. Subscribe to our newsletterCould being a "morning person" improve your health … on the moon? Scientists have identified what appears to be a "cavity" of reduced cosmic radiation near Earth's moon. The finding could help lower astronauts' exposure to harmful radiation on future lunar missions by timing some surface operations for local morning hours.
The discovery, based on data from China's Chang'e-4 lunar lander, suggests Earth's magnetic field may affect distances in space farther than scientists previously expected. According to the researchers, the finding challenges the long-held assumption that galactic cosmic rays are roughly uniform throughout the space between Earth and the moon outside our planet's protective magnetic field.
Article continues belowCosmic rays are among the biggest radiation hazards for astronauts traveling beyond low Earth orbit. These high-energy particles can penetrate spacecraft and human tissue, in turn damaging DNA and increasing the risk of cancer. With more crewed trips planned to the moon, starting with NASA's Artemis II mission launching as soon as April 1, researchers said a better map of radiation intensity could help mission planners reduce astronauts' radiation exposure during surface explorations.
"The next landings will probably be in the polar regions," which can be permanently sunlit, Robert Wimmer-Schweingruber, a professor at the Institute of Experimental and Applied Physics at Kiel University in Germany and a corresponding author of the study, told Live Science in an email. He said lunar morning appears to be the best time for excursions because it reduces the amount of radiation on astronauts' skin by about 20% compared to average radiation levels on the moon.
Calculating cosmic rays
I had not expected to see this 'shadow' or cavity,
Robert Wimmer-Schweingruber, professor at the Institute of Experimental and Applied Physics at Kiel University
To find this cosmic-ray cavity, the researchers analyzed data collected over 31 lunar cycles from January 2019 to January 2022, focusing on quiet times in the solar cycle, when the measured space radiation was predominantly from galactic cosmic rays. They looked for repeated changes in Chang'e-4's measured proton counts from the rays as the moon moved through different parts of its orbit around Earth.
The Lunar Lander Neutron and Dosimetry instrument recorded galactic cosmic ray protons in two energy ranges, which the researchers then grouped by lunar local time. They found that the lower-energy protons, in the 9.18 to 34.14 mega-electron-volt range, dropped by about 20% during the moon's local morning, during the moon's waxing gibbous phase (in the period between a new moon and a full moon) compared with later hours.
Sign up for the Live Science daily newsletter nowContact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBecause the decrease showed up in a specific, recurring part of the moon's waxing phase rather than across all times, the team inferred that the moon was passing through a real region of reduced cosmic ray radiation, which they believed was being created as Earth's magnetic field blocked some high-energy protons. To investigate this idea, they ran simulations of the protons' movement through the moon's orbit and found the same cavity.
"I had not expected to see this 'shadow' or cavity," Wimmer-Schweingruber said. "It makes absolute sense in retrospect, but I was very skeptical when I first saw this result," and that's why the team performed so many tests, he added.
Stretching Earth's magnetic influence
The findings point to a new picture of how cosmic radiation behaves between Earth and the moon. Scientists had generally believed that, once galactic cosmic rays crossed Earth's magnetosphere, they were spread fairly evenly throughout the Earth-moon space and were only minimally affected by Earth's magnetic field.
"Basically this result means that the Earth's magnetosphere influences space even beyond its extension," Wimmer-Schweingruber said. The team expected Earth to affect the moon in the magnetotail, the long stream of magnetic field extending away from the sun on Earth's nightside, he noted, but they did not predict the similar effect ahead of the magnetosphere on the sunward side
A rendering of Earth's magnetotail extending behind it, away from the sun. (Image credit: NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio - ADNET Systems, Inc./AJ Christensen, Kyoto University/Yusuke Ebihara, University of California, Berkeley/Robert Lillis, eMITS/Vanessa Thomas, eMITS/Joy Ng, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)RELATED STORIES—Artemis II: NASA is preparing for a return to the moon, but why is it going back?
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Wimmer-Schweingruber said future studies with bigger datasets could better define the size and behavior of this cavity, which could help pave the way for a more practical era of lunar exploration. He suggested a familiar rule of thumb may apply for safer moon missions: It's "best for astronauts to venture out onto the lunar surface in the local morning hours," Wimmer-Schweingruber said — "just like for humans on Earth!"
Article SourcesShang, W., Liu, J., Xu, Z., Yue, C., Guo, R., Xiao, C., Shi, Q., Wimmer-Schweingruber, R., Guo, J., William, D. A., Rankin, R., Tian, A., Zong, Q., Han, C., Park, J., Wang, H., Liu, W., Fu, S., Zhai, L. M., . . . Chen, T. (2026). A galactic cosmic ray cavity in Earth-Moon space. Science Advances. 12(1), eadv1908. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adv1908
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Kenna Hughes-CastleberryContent Manager, Live ScienceKenna Hughes-Castleberry is the Content Manager at Live Science. Formerly, she was the Content Manager at Space.com and before that the Science Communicator at JILA, a physics research institute. Kenna is also a book author, with her upcoming book 'Octopus X' scheduled for release in spring of 2027. Her beats include physics, health, environmental science, technology, AI, animal intelligence, corvids, and cephalopods.
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