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Future Moon base could be powered by lunar DIRT, say scientists as Nasa plans to send astronauts in 2026

Published on April 03, 2025 at 03:00 PM

IMAGINE your home was powered by the dirt in your back garden.

Well, that could be a reality for future lunar .

Illustration of lunar habitat, solar panels, robots, and a solar cell fabrication facility.
Making solar cells on the Moon instead of Earth could cut transport costs by as much as 99%, according to the team behind the research

Scientists have discovered a way to use Moon dust to build that can withstand powerful cosmic radiation better than cells built on .

Using simulated lunar dirt – known as regolith – scientists have been able to create a new Moon glass.

“The solar cells used in space now are amazing, reaching efficiencies of 30% to even 40%, but that efficiency comes with a price,”; explained lead researcher Felix Lang of the University of Potsdam, Germany.

“They are very expensive and are relatively heavy because they use glass or a thick foil as cover.

“It’s hard to justify lifting all these cells into space.”;

Using this new technique, astronauts could build their own solar cells in space.

Doing so would remove the need to haul heavy materials from Earth to the Moon – which would greatly reduce launch costs.

It also means there will be greater capacity for materials that can't be replicated on the Moon.

Scientists say the process of making moonglass solar cells is surprisingly easy.

So, future lunar astronauts will likely have to do it themselves.

Making solar cells on the Moon instead of Earth could cut transport costs by as much as 99%, according to the team behind the research.

It should also reduce a spacecraft’s launch mass by roughly the same amount.

And containing costs will make – and even Mars colonies – more feasible.

“If you cut the weight by 99%, you don’t need ultra-efficient 30% solar cells, you just make more of them on the Moon,” added Lang.

“Plus, our cells are more stable against radiation, while the others would degrade over time.”;

When zapped with space-grade radiation, the moonglass solar cells outperformed Earth-made ones, scientists wrote in science journal Device.

Standard Earth-made glass slowly browns in space, which can block sunlight and make them less efficient.

But moonglass apparently has a natural brown tint from impurities in the Moon dust.

These impurities prevent the moonglass from further darkening, and make the solar cells more resistant to radiation.

has plans to send humans to the Moon in September 2026 in its Artemis III mission.

They are targeting a landing near the lunar South Pole, which scientists believe hosts water and is therefore a good spot for a lunar base.

Both Nasa and the European Space Agency are looking into using lunar regolith to

“From extracting water for fuel to building houses with lunar bricks, scientists have been finding ways to use Moon dust,” said Lang.

“Now, we can turn it into solar cells too, possibly providing the energy a future Moon city will need.”

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