There's a Moon cube now! At least, it looks that way based on some intriguing photos from the Chinese lunar rover Yutu-2, released by the country's space agency this week.

The photos show a distant object that looks like a perfect cube, and China say the rover is headed to check it out.

It's worth worth noting a few caveats about the photo, spotted yesterday by space journalist Andrew Jones, who described the formation as a "cubic shape." For one thing, the object is just a few pixels in the photo, meaning it could easily be some sort of optical illusion that'll be a disappointment up close.

And China has struggled with lunar science communication in the past. In 2019, Yutu-2 "discovered" a "gel-like substance" on the lunar surface, but upon closer inspection it turned out to be, well, rocks. It also trumpeted the discover of a "shard" on the Moon earlier this year, but that turned out to just be another interesting rock. Did we mention that there's not a lot other than rocks on the Moon?

Jones, for his part, is managing expectations.

"So yeah, it's not an obelisk or aliens, but certainly something to check out," Jones tweeted in followup.

The idea of alien artifacts on the Moon runs deep in popular culture — remember that one scene in "2001: A Space Odyssey"? — but, needless to say, none have been found in reality.

The apparent cube sits in the Von Kármán crater, and China's space program has been dubbed it, evocatively, the "mystery house."

Yutu-2 will spend two or three lunar days traveling to investigate the cube, each of which is about 29 Earth days long.

Jones speculated that the object could be a boulder carved out by an asteroid impact, and posted a photo of a similarly sharply defined boulder found previously on the Moon's surface.

CNET's coverage of the most recent discovery agrees with Jones' analysis, saying the most likely explanation is that the Moon cube is a boulder.

That's not to say Yutu-2 hasn't ever found anything cool. In 2019, CNET reported the rover discovered that the Moon's surface was made of different materials than we previously thought, a discovery that could better predict how Earth's internal layers might change over time.

We're not saying there isn't weird stuff on the Moon. After all, we just recently found enough buried oxygen under its surface to sustain billions of people. But suffice it to say we aren't holding our breath over Moon cube, and if it turns out to be anything other than a rock we'll be really impressed.

Updated to correctly state the length of a lunar day.

More on space: Scientists Discover Enormous Black Hole Right Near Our Galaxy


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