Try GOLD - Free
Get to know lunar rays
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
|October 2025
A full Moon might bleach the sky and thwart your stargazing, but it's the best time to catch the magnificent lunar rays
-
The worst time to look at the Moon is when it's full, right? Not necessarily. It's true that at full Moon, sunlight hits the surface head-on, flattening the appearance of its rugged landscape of deep craters, towering mountains and meandering valleys, showing only a flat, grey-and-white disc. But this direct lighting reveals something else: lunar rays - bright lanes of shattered rock and fine dust that fan out from impact craters.
While these are hard to see when the Sun is low in the lunar sky (when we see the Moon as a crescent or a gibbous disc), when the Sun's light strikes them from above during full Moon they shine. And with 2025's first supermoon coming on 7 October, there's never been a better time to see them.
Imagine you're standing on the Moon, 100 million years ago, watching a huge asteroid fall from the sky. As it hits, it blasts a crater – maybe 85km (53 miles) wide and 5km (3 miles) deep – out of the surface. It also sprays vast amounts of pulverised rock and dust away from the impact site, which arcs overhead. Where it settles, it leaves long rays of debris stretching back to the crater. That's how lunar rays were formed.

Find these craters for some lunar-ray-gazing fun during October's supermoon
This story is from the October 2025 edition of BBC Sky at Night Magazine.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Turn mono Sun shots into fiery colour
A simple, free technique to take your solar images from greyscale to gold
3 mins
October 2025
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Create a striking moonrise composite
Here's how to showcase the Moon's graceful ascent from the horizon
3 mins
October 2025
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
NOVAStar long eye relief planetary eyepieces
Striking views at a pocket-friendly price point? Seeing is believing...
4 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
THE SKY GUIDE CHALLENGE
Make a composite that reveals how the Moon's diameter changes over a lunar cycle
2 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Create a striking moonrise composite
Here's how to showcase the Moon's graceful ascent from the horizon
2 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Q&A WITH A FAST RADIO BURST EXPERT
A significant amount of the Universe's matter from the Big Bang is missing. Now scientists believe they've found it hiding between galaxies
3 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Last chance for Titan transits
It'll be 13 years before Titan crosses Saturn again. Here's how to grab shots of it now
3 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Ripples in time
A decade of gravitational wave detections In 2015, a new field of astronomy opened with the very first observation made beyond the electromagnetic spectrum. Elizabeth Todd looks at the milestone and what it meant
8 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
How to find a speck in space
New Horizons proves stellar parallax can locate a probe in the vastness, using the light of just two stars
4 mins
October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
FIRST CONTACT
Seven missions that gave us our first real look at alien worlds
6 mins
October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size