The Borneo Post

High hopes for Japan’s ‘Moon Sniper’ mission

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TOKYO: Japan’s ‘Moon Sniper’ spacecraft will attempt a historic touchdown on the lunar surface this weekend using pinpoint technology the country hopes will lead to success where many have failed.

With its Smart Lander for Investigat­ing Moon (SLIM) mission, Japan wants to become the fifth nation to pull off a fiendishly tricky soft landing on the rocky surface.

Only the United States, the Soviet Union, China and India have accomplish­ed the feat, and Japan’s lander — equipped with a rolling robot developed by a major toy company — is designed to do so with unpreceden­ted precision.

The descent of the lightweigh­t SLIM craft, nicknamed the ‘Moon Sniper’ by space agency JAXA, is scheduled to start at midnight Japan time on Saturday (1500 GMT Friday).

If all goes to plan, the touchdown will be around 20 minutes later.

The craft is targeting an area within 100 metres of a spot on the lunar surface — far less than the usual landing zone of several kilometres.

Success would reverse Japan’s fortunes in space after two failed lunar missions and recent rocket failures, including explosions after take-off.

It would also echo the triumph of India’s low-cost space programme in August, when the country became the first to land an uncrewed craft near the Moon’s largely unexplored south pole.

SLIM is expected to land on a crater where the Moon’s mantle — the deep inner layer beneath its crust — is believed to be accessible at the surface.

“The rocks exposed here are crucial in the search for the origins of the Moon and the Earth,” Tomokatsu Morota, an associate professor at the University of Tokyo specialisi­ng in lunar and planetary exploratio­n, told AFP.

JAXA has already made a pinpoint landing on an asteroid, but the challenge is greater on the Moon, where gravity is stronger.

With just one shot at landing, the pressure is on — and the craft’s precision is vital in the attempt to ‘land on an area surrounded by rocks’, which it will examine with a camera, Morota said.

 ?? File photo — AFP ?? File photo shows a H-IIA rocket carrying a small lunar surface probe and other objects lifts off from the Tanegashim­a Space Centre on Tanegashim­a island, Kagoshima prefecture. Japan’s ‘Moon Sniper’ spacecraft will attempt a historic touchdown on the lunar surface this weekend using pinpoint robotics that the country hopes can succeed where many have failed..
File photo — AFP File photo shows a H-IIA rocket carrying a small lunar surface probe and other objects lifts off from the Tanegashim­a Space Centre on Tanegashim­a island, Kagoshima prefecture. Japan’s ‘Moon Sniper’ spacecraft will attempt a historic touchdown on the lunar surface this weekend using pinpoint robotics that the country hopes can succeed where many have failed..

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