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This is Scientific American 60-Second Space. I'm Clara Moskowitz. Got a minute?

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The moon has taken its fair share of beatings, as its craters attest.

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And last fall the moon took the biggest impact we've ever seen, when a huge meteorite slammed into the area known as the Mare Nubium basin.

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Spanish astronomers spotted the September 11th collision using a telescope network that automatically scans the moon.

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The impact vaporized rock and created a flash of light brighter and longer than any we've ever recorded on the moon's surface.

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The compact-car sized meteorite smashed into the moon at 61,000 kilometers per hour.

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The ensuing explosion had the force of 15 tons of TNT, creating a new crater 40 meters wide.

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Anyone on Earth who happened to be moon-gazing at the time would have seen a flash almost as bright as the North Star.

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The moon gets pummeled by space rocks more often than Earth does because it lacks our protective atmosphere.

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The friction from passing through this blanket of air burns up most incoming meteors, letting through only the largest ones.

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Without such a shield, the moon is defenseless.

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Poor moon. But hey, better it than Earth!

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Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Space. I'm Clara Moskowitz.

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