Bangkok Post

Beijing Aids to land on dark side of moon

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BEIJING: China will launch a mission to land on the dark side of the moon in two years’ time, state media reported, in what would be a first for humanity.

The moon’s far hemisphere is never directly visible from Earth and while it has been photograph­ed, with the first images appearing in 1959, it has never been explored.

China’s Chang’e-4 probe — named for the goddess of the moon in Chinese mythology — will be sent to that part of the moon in 2018, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

“The Chang’e-4’s lander and rover will make a soft landing on the back side of the moon, and will carry out in-place and patrolling surveys,” it cited the country’s lunar exploratio­n chief Liu Jizhong as saying on Thursday.

Beijing sees its military-run, multibilli­on-dollar space programme as a marker of its rising global stature and mounting technical expertise as well as evidence of the ruling Communist Party’s success in transformi­ng the once povertystr­icken nation.

But for the most part it has so far replicated activities that the US and Soviet Union pioneered decades ago.

“The implementa­tion of the Chang’e-4 mission has helped our country make the leap from following to leading in the field of lunar exploratio­n,” Mr Liu added.

In 2013, China landed a rover dubbed Yutu on the moon and the following year an unmanned probe completed its first return mission to the earth’s only natural satellite.

Beijing has plans for a permanent orbiting station by 2020 and eventually to send a human to the moon.

Space flight is “an important manifestat­ion of overall national strength”, Xinhua cited science official Qian Yan as saying, adding that every success had “greatly stimulated the public’s ... pride in the achievemen­ts of the motherland’s developmen­t.”

Clive Neal, chair of the Lunar Exploratio­n Analysis Group affiliated with NASA, confirmed that the Chang’e-4 mission was unpreceden­ted.

“There has been no surface exploratio­n of the far side,” he said on Friday.

It is “very different to the near side because of the biggest hole in the solar system — the South Pole-Aitken basin, which may have exposed mantle materials — and the thicker lunar crust”.

The basin is the largest known impact crater in the solar system, nearly 2,500km wide and 13km deep.

“I am sure the internatio­nal lunar science community will be very excited about this mission,” he said. “I know I am.”

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