Chang’e-5 probe lands on moon’s surface
CHINA successfully landed a spacecraft on the moon’s surface yesterday in a historic mission to retrieve lunar surface samples.
The Chang’e-5 probe “successfully landed on the moon in the pre-selected landing area,” the official China News Service said, citing space officials.
The probe, launched on November 24 from the tropical southern island of Hainan, adds to a string of increasingly bold missions by a Chinese space program that aims eventually to land a human on the moon.
The uncrewed mission, named after the mythical Chinese goddess of the moon, aims to collect lunar material to help scientists learn more about the moon’s origins.
The mission will attempt to collect 2 kilograms of samples in a previously unvisited area in a massive lava plain known as Oceanus Procellarum, or “Ocean of Storms.”
If the mission is completed as planned, it would make China the third nation to have retrieved lunar samples after the United States and the Soviet Union. The lander vehicle that touched down on the moon’s surface was one of several spacecraft deployed by the Chang’e-5 probe.
Upon landing, the lander vehicle is supposed to drill into the ground with a robotic arm, then transfer its soil and rock samples to an ascender vehicle that would lift off and dock with an orbiting module.
State broadcaster CCTV said it would start collecting samples on the lunar surface in the next two days. The samples would be transferred to a return capsule for the trip back to Earth, landing in north China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.
China made its first lunar landing in 2013. In January last year. The Chang’e-4 probe touched down on the far side of the moon, the first space probe from any nation to do so.
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