We may need bases below the surface to keep moon residents safe from radiation Shutterstock/Shivashankara
If astronauts on the moon are to avoid harmful radiation, long-term lunar bases will need to be shielded by 2 to 3 metres of regolith – the moon’s surface layer of rock and dust.
Jingnan Guo and Mikhail Dobynde at the University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei have analysed how the thickness of a lunar base’s shielding would affect radiation doses for people living on the moon. Their study includes using the lunar soil as a shield as well as…

![Small dome in the Compton-Belkovich region (61.33 ?N, 99.68 ?E). Evidence indicates a volcanic origin for this and other intriguing features in the region. Incidence angle is 64?, Sun is from the SSW, image is ~510 m across. NAC image number M139238146L [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].](https://images.newscientistbeta.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/07172644/SEI_163208069.jpg)

