The Moon doesn't rotate. It does revolve around the earth every 27 days. I think this would be slow enough for tracking not to be an issue.<br />The field of view would only be a sliver of the sky, but the magnification would be unsurpassed. I think the topography of the crater basin would be too imprecise for anything but radiowaves. It would actually need to be equatorial or mid-latitude to avoid interference from the earth's surface or auroral sources.<br />Unfortunately, I don't think this idea is feasible anymore. Radio waves need metal, my moon-glass wouldn't cut it. Some asteroids are iron ore rich, but when they impact the moon, it ejects a plume of debris originating from the Lunar surface. This debris settles over the fused metal breccia I would need. <img src="/images/icons/frown.gif" /><br />I don't know how deeply, but even a foot of regolith screw up the plan. I will keep an eye on coming Lunar missions. Maybe there is a portion of the Moon's surface that is metal rich. I remember seeing a false colour map of the Moon that showed regions highly metallic. I f a metallic asteroid impacted such a region, maybe the plume that settled would be metallic enough to facilitate this concept?