A Chinese spacecraft landed on the far side of the moon, boosting the nation’s efforts to compete with the U.S. in a race to send people back to the lunar surface for the first time in more than half a century.
The China National Space Administration announced that Chang’e-6 “successfully landed at the designated landing area,” the Xinhua News Agency reported Sunday.
Chang’e-6 will attempt to be the first to collect samples from the moon’s far side and transport them back to Earth. The mission is China’s second to the far side, following a landing by the Chang’e-4 spacecraft in 2019.
No other country has landed on that half of the moon, a more difficult area for communications because it never faces Earth.
Within 48 hours of landing, Chang’e-6 is scheduled to begin drilling below ground while also extending a robotic arm to gather material from the surface.
The landing site, an impact crater in the South Pole-Aitken Basin, may contain water ice, a resource that could potentially be used to make oxygen and rocket fuel for long-term human habitation on the moon.
The site, known as the Apollo Basin, was chosen because of its potential value of scientific exploration, as well as the conditions of the landing area, including communication and telemetry conditions and the flatness of the terrain, Xinhua cited Huang Hao, an offficial at the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, as saying.
The mission, which launched on May 6, is expected to last about 53 days, the China National Space Administration said.
“First-hand, direct samples from the moon’s far side are essential to giving us a deeper understanding of the characteristics and differences of the two sides of the moon, and to revealing the secrets of the moon,” state media reported Zeng Xingguo, a scientist at the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, saying when Chang’e-6 launched on May 3.
Chang’e-6 is part of a series of missions designed to culminate with the first Chinese astronauts traveling to the moon before the end of the decade.
By then, the U.S. wants to have returned to the moon for the first time since the end of the Apollo program in 1972, with NASA’s Artemis program targeting to land astronauts near its south pole in 2026.
The Chang’e-6 landing came just days after Russia’s State Duma, the lower house of parliament, ratified an agreement with Beijing to collaborate on a joint project to create a permanent base, the International Lunar Research Station, near the lunar south pole.
The agreement “strengthens the strategic partnership with China, advances Russian space activities, and reinforces Russia’s leading role in space exploration, including lunar research and utilization,” the Tass news agency reported on May 28.
___
© 2024 Bloomberg L.P
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC