China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Satellite launch first step to far side of moon

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China launched a relay satellite on Monday as the first step in the groundbrea­king Chang’e 4 lunar mission.

The satellite, named Queqiao, a legendary bridge in the Milky Way, was lifted into space atop a Long March 4C carrier rocket from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province, the China National Space Administra­tion said in a statement.

Queqiao has been placed into an Earth-moon transfer orbit and has started a journey toward a halo orbit around the Earth-moon Lagrangian point 2, a gravitatio­nally stable spot located 455,000 kilometers from Earth beyond the far side of the moon. From the orbit, it will relay communicat­ion signals between Earth and the Chang’e 4 lunar probe that is scheduled to land on the moon around year’s end, the administra­tion said.

Queqiao will be the world’s first communicat­ions satellite operating near the Earthmoon L2 point, the administra­tion said.

It added that the launch, which marked the 275th flight of the Long March rocket family, also sent up two mini satellites made by Harbin Institute of Technology in Heilongjia­ng province. The satellites will orbit together to conduct astronomic­al observatio­n.

Queqiao, developed by the China Academy of Space Technology under China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, weighs more than 400 kilograms and has a design life of three years. The satellite has an umbrella antenna with a diameter of nearly 5 meters, enabling it to transfer data from Chang’e 4 to ground control in real time.

Wu Weiren, chief engineer of China’s lunar exploratio­n program, said the Chang’e 4 probe will be unable to directly communicat­e with ground controller­s on Earth due to its position on the far side of the moon, so it must have a relay satellite to transmit signals.

China Academy of Space Technology said the developmen­t of Queqiao means Chinese scientists have become the first to have reliable technology for relaying signals between Earth and far side of the moon.

The relay satellite is also equipped with a low-frequency radio spectromet­er developed by Dutch scientists to help scientists “listen” to the deeper reaches of the cosmos as well as a small lunar optical imaging detector developed by Saudi Arabia.

China plans to launch the Chang’e 4 probe before the end of 2018 and land it on the

far side of the moon, where no probe has successful­ly landed and explored. The far side has been extensivel­y photograph­ed, starting with a Soviet probe in 1959. In 1962, a NASA probe crashed into the far side of the moon, but sent back no data.

Tidal forces on Earth slow the moon’s rotation to the point where the same side always faces Earth. The other side, most of which is never visible from Earth, is the far side of the moon.

The Chang’e 4 mission will enable scientists to discover what they haven’t known about the moon. They also can take advantage of the far side’s shield against Earth’s interferen­ce to make clearer observatio­ns into deep space, according to Bao Weimin, head of science and technolo- gy at China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp.

In addition to Chinese equipment, Chang’e 4 also will carry scientific equipment developed by the Netherland­s, Sweden, Germany and Saudi Arabia.

China started sending robotic probes to the moon in 2007 and has carried out several lunar missions since then. It landed the Chang’e 3 probe, which carried the first Chinese lunar rover, on the moon in December 2013. The Chang’e 3 mission made the first soft landing — the opposite of a hard impact — on the moon by a man-made spacecraft in nearly four decades.

The next step in China’s lunar exploratio­n program, the Chang’e 5 mission, is set to take place in 2019 and will put a rover on the lunar surface to take samples and then bring them back to Earth.

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