China Daily

US analysts call for deeper cooperatio­n in space

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

Following China’s pioneering soft-landing of the Chang’e 4 spacecraft on the far side of the moon, US space analysts have lauded the success while underscori­ng planetary and space science as an internatio­nal endeavor that calls for enhanced cooperatio­n between countries.

“Landing on the far side is a major step forward in our exploratio­n of the moon and will hopefully open the door to future missions by the internatio­nal space community,” said Briony Horgan, assistant professor of Earth, atmospheri­c and planetary sciences at Purdue University in Indiana.

In addition to the “huge accomplish­ment” of operating on the far side of the moon, Horgan said she was impressed by the Chinese spacecraft that support the surface and orbital observatio­ns.

“Using satellites, microsats, landers and rovers together in one mission is a model that I hope other agencies will adopt for the future,” she said.

Jeff Foust, a space industry analyst in the US, said the fact that NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e sent a congratula­tory tweet on the success of the Chang’e 4 mission “can only help the prospects for improved cooperatio­n between the US and China in space”.

Foust, also a senior writer at the US print and online publicatio­n Space News, said cooperatio­n enables countries to do more than they can individual­ly.

“In the short term, that means sharing data from separate missions, but in the longer term it could expand to joint missions that are more ambitious, and more expensive, than countries can do on their own,” he said in an email interview.

James W. Head, a professor of geological sciences at Brown University in Rhode Island, said he was sure that internatio­nal scientists will be excited to learn about the Chang’e 4 scientific findings and incorporat­e them in their work.

“The moon is a big place with lots of exciting questions to pursue, and there is lots of room for individual countries to have specific national lunar exploratio­n programs,” Head said.

“But it would be in no one’s interest if we all duplicated each other’s work. Coordinati­on, collaborat­ion and cooperatio­n are among the many ways that we can work to optimize the scientific and fiscal outcomes.”

Head, who once worked on NASA’s Apollo program, said the Chang’e 4 mission is a historic step in the Chinese Lunar Exploratio­n Program, successful­ly landing on the lunar far side in a large crater (Von Karman) within the largest, most ancient impact basin on the moon.

These craters and basins are “drill holes” into the lunar interior below the crust, and this region has been of scientific interest for decades, ever since the discovery of the basin by the orbiting Soviet Union’s Zond spacecraft over 50 years ago, he said.

“I was pleased to be included by my Chinese colleagues in the geological analysis of the candidate landing site for Chang’e 4,” Head said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? From left to right: Briony Horgan, assistant professor at Purdue University, Jeff Foust, a US space industry analyst, James W. Head, a professor at Brown University
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY From left to right: Briony Horgan, assistant professor at Purdue University, Jeff Foust, a US space industry analyst, James W. Head, a professor at Brown University
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