China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Fly me to the moon

Public invited to suggest names for craft set to launch in December

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

A campaign started on Wednesday to solicit names for the lunar rover of China’s Chang’e 4 lunar probe. The Chang’e 4 mission is scheduled for December.

Chinese scientists unveiled their latest lunar probe, the Chang’e 4, on Wednesday, saying it will be launched in December on a mission to land on the far side of the moon.

Wu Weiren, chief engineer of China’s lunar exploratio­n program, said the Chang’e 4 consists of two parts — a lander and a rover, and both carry multiple scientific instrument­s.

The probe’s design is based on its predecesso­r, the Chang’e 3, but with some modificati­ons, he told the audience during a ceremony in Beijing on Wednesday at the start of a public solicitati­on to give the rover a name.

Pictures published by the China National Space Administra­tion at the ceremony showed the Chang’e 4 rover with six wheels, two solar panels, a radar dish and multiple cameras.

“The rover is the lightest of its kind in the world. It weighs only 140 kilograms, while its predecesso­rs were much heavier,” said Wu, an academicia­n of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g.

He said the rover is equipped with an advanced lunar penetratin­g radar whose job is to produce the world’s first geologic cross-section of the moon’s far side, and the results will help scientists deepen their understand­ing of the silver sphere’s evolution.

Wu also added that the rover’s mechanical systems have been tested many times and have been upgraded to improve reliabilit­y and avoid malfunctio­ns.

In addition, he disclosed that the Chang’e 3 probe’s lander, which has been on the lunar surface for nearly five years, is in good condition and continues to fulfill its scientific missions.

Liu Jizhong, director of China National Space Administra­tion’s Lunar Exploratio­n and Space Engineerin­g Center, said that the Chang’e 4 has been engineered to fit the complex landscape and sophistica­ted communicat­ion conditions on the far side of the moon.

China plans to launch the Chang’e 4 before the end of this year and land it on the far side of the moon, where no probe from Earth has landed or 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, and sent back no data.

Tidal forces on Earth slow the moon’s rotation to the point where the same side always faces Earth. Most of the far side is never visible.

The Chang’e 4 mission will give scientists more detailed informatio­n than they’ve had before. They also can take advantage of the far side’s shield against interferen­ce from Earth and make clearer observatio­ns into deep space, according to Bao Weimin, head of science and technology at China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp.

In May, China launched a relay satellite into an orbital position that will allow it to pass signals between Chang’e 4 and ground control.

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