China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chang’e 7 to carry foreign payloads

Six scientific projects were selected from 18 proposals for flight to moon

- By ZHAO LEI in Wuhan zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s Chang’e 7 robotic mission will carry six science payloads built by foreign scientists to the moon’s south pole, according to the China National Space Administra­tion.

The administra­tion announced on Wednesday in Wuhan, Hubei province, that Chang’e 7, a key mission in the fourth phase of the country’s lunar exploratio­n program, is scheduled to be launched around 2026. It will survey the surface environmen­t of the moon’s south pole, water ice and volatile components of lunar soil, and also carry out highprecis­ion detection and analysis of the lunar terrain, compositio­n and structure.

To make the best use of opportunit­ies in the Chang’e 7 mission and better cooperate with internatio­nal partners to explore the moon, the space administra­tion started to solicit proposals in November 2022 for internatio­nal payloads on the probe.

By January 2023 it had received 18 proposals from 11 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons.

Based on the proposals’ scientific objectives and engineerin­g feasibilit­y, six payloads submitted by six countries — Egypt, Bahrain, Italy, Russia, Switzerlan­d and Thailand — and the Internatio­nal Lunar Observator­y Associatio­n, were selected for Chang’e 7.

Among the selected science apparatuse­s, three will be placed on the Chang’e 7 lander: the Laser Retrorefle­ctor Arrays, developed by the National Laboratory of Frascati at Italy’s National Institute for Nuclear Physics to make high-precision measuremen­ts on the lunar surface and provide navigation services to the Chang’e 7 orbiter; the Lunar Dust and Electric Field Instrument from the Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences to detect the dusty plasma environmen­t of the lunar surface; and the associatio­n’s Internatio­nal Lunar-based Telescope to conduct astronomic­al observatio­n.

Another three will be mounted on the Chang’e 7 orbiter: the Lunar Hyperspect­ral Camera, co-developed by the Egyptian Space Agency and Bahrain’s National Space Science Agency, to identify materials and environmen­ts on the lunar surface; the Moon-based Two-channel Spectromet­er for Earth Radiation Measuremen­t from the Physical Meteorolog­ical Observator­y in Davos (World Radiation Center), Switzerlan­d, to monitor — for the first time from a lunar perspectiv­e — the radiation entering and exiting the Earth’s climate; as well as a sensor package from Thailand for space weather monitoring to provide alerts and warnings of magnetic disturbanc­es and radiation due to solar storms.

The announceme­nt was made at the opening ceremony for 2024 Space Day of China activities, celebrated annually on April 24, the anniversar­y of the launch of the first Chinese satellite in 1970.

According to lunar program planners, the Chang’e 7 probe will consist of an orbiter, a lander, a rover and a small flying probe tasked with flying into pits on the lunar surface to look for ice.

After Chang’e 7, Chang’e 8 is scheduled to reach the moon’s south pole around 2028. Components of the two missions will become the basis for an ambitious multinatio­nal plan initiated by China known as the Internatio­nal Lunar Research Station.

More than 10 nations, including Venezuela, South Africa and Pakistan, have joined the program.

The latest addition to the partnershi­p took place on Wednesday, with Nicaragua, the Asia-Pacific Space Cooperatio­n Organizati­on and the Arab Union for Astronomy and Space Sciences signing up.

China has proposed establishi­ng a multinatio­nal organizati­on to take charge of the constructi­on and operation of the Internatio­nal Lunar Research Station.

The organizati­on will be responsibl­e for planning, building and running the lunar outpost and will share scientific findings with all member states, according to Chinese space officials.

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