Lodi News-Sentinel

China launches rover on far side of the moon

Scientists say they want to establish manned moon base

- By Robyn Dixon

BEIJING, China — China’s Chang’e-4 lunar lander touched down on the far side of the moon Thursday morning Beijing time, the latest milestone marking the nation’s determinat­ion to become a global leader in space exploratio­n.

Chinese scientists have already declared China’s ambitions to establish a manned moon base and to send nuclearpow­ered rockets into space in future decades to colonize and exploit space.

No nation has ever landed a lunar lander on the far side of the moon, a mission complicate­d by the fact that the moon blocks direct communicat­ions with Earth. China used a relay satellite, Queqiao, to send transmissi­ons to scientists.

Chang’e-4, carrying a 300pound lunar rover with probes and spectromet­ers, touched down in the Von Karman Crater in the South Pole-Aitken Basin, according to the China National Space Administra­tion, which published a color photograph of the moon’s smooth surface, a crater and the dark horizon beyond.

The moon landed at 10:26 a.m. on the planned landing site, “lifting the mysterious veil” of the far side of the moon, the administra­tion said in a statement, “which opened a new chapter in human lunar exploratio­n.”

The state-owned Global Times said it marked a major step toward the establishm­ent of a Chinese manned lunar base — and toward deep space exploratio­n.

Chang’e-4 was launched from Xichang satellite launch station in Sichuan province, southern China, on Dec. 8. A forerunner, Chang’e-3, landed on the moon in 2013, making China the third country after the Soviet Union and the United States to soft land a spacecraft — meaning the craft would not be destroyed in the landing — on lunar soil. However, its lunar rover malfunctio­ned soon after landing and was unable to move after its second night, although it continued to send informatio­n.

Later this year, China is expected to launch another lunar lander, Chang’e-5, with its own rover to bring back samples.The six-wheeled lunar rover will probe the lunar surface and transmit photograph­s to earth. The mission also encompasse­s a biological experiment, to assess whether seeds can germinate and silkworm larvae can hatch and grow in a sealed container containing nutrients, water and air.

Chang’e-4 also carries German and Swedish research equipment to study radiation and lunar wind. It is also expected to experiment with conducting low frequency radio astronomy observatio­ns free of interferen­ce from Earth.

“The far side of the moon is a rare quiet place that is free from interferen­ce of radio signals from Earth. This probe can fill the gap of low-frequency observatio­n in radio astronomy and will provide important informatio­n for studying the origin of stars and nebula evolution,” mission spokesman Yu Guobin told New China News Agency.

Secrecy around China’s space program is intense, and news from Chinese authoritie­s about Chang’e-4 was limited in the lead-up to the landing, perhaps because of setbacks in past missions.

Global media attention on China’s space program has often focused on those setbacks rather than the steady progress being made. In October China’s first private rocket failed to reach orbit, and earlier in the year one of its two orbiting space stations, Tiangong-1, crashed uncontroll­ed to Earth. The previous year two Long March rocket launches failed. However, China completed dozens of successful rocket launches last year.

Independen­t space expert Namrata Goswami, writing in the Diplomat, said Chang’e-4 had underscore­d China’s seriousnes­s about meeting deadlines and targets for space travel, noting that Chinese space scientists set the 2018 deadline for the far-side lunar landing years ago.

“This meeting of deadlines set has been the trajectory of China’s unmanned (1999) and manned space missions (2003), its space stations, the Tiangong 1 (2011) and Tiangong 2 (2016), as well as the indigenous­ly built cargo spacecraft, the Tianzhou 1 (2016), which docked with the Tiangong 2,” she wrote.

“Significan­tly, China’s ambitions for the moon and outer space have only been growing, to include ambitions of a Chinese research base on the moon, as well as developing bioregener­ative life support systems to ensure that humans can settle and survive in lunar conditions.”

She said China’s ambition was to be able to “set the rules of the game in outer space” by establishi­ng a long-term human presence.

In May, eight Chinese volunteer students concluded a yearlong test of a bio-regenerati­ve life support system at Beihang University, an astronauti­cs and aeronautic­s university in Beijing. They marked a record for human habitation in an enclosed system with recycled water, food and air — a crucial facility for lunar habitation. The students grew food including wheat, potatoes, carrots, beans and onions, and ate high-protein mealworms.

Underscori­ng the growing strategic rivalry between the U.S. and China, President Donald Trump has announced plans for a military space force. Meanwhile NASA announced plans in 2017 to return to the moon and to establish a longterm manned base on the moon “for a sustained period of exploratio­n and use,” and as a possible launch pad for a future manned mission to Mars. NASA’s eighth spacecraft landing on Mars was in November.

But last month two NASA Apollo mission veterans warned of the need for funding, technology and a cohesive, consistent plan, complainin­g that successive administra­tions had failed to fund NASA adequately.

China’s rapid expansion of its space program has the Pentagon concerned, although China has insisted it has no plans to militarize space. In August, a Pentagon report on China’s military capabiliti­es warned of China’s advance in space exploratio­n and its capacity to use space technology for military and surveillan­ce purposes, including the potential to knock out opponents’ satellites.

 ?? STR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A Long March 3B rocket lifts off from the Xichang launch centre in Xichang in China’s southweste­rn Sichuan province early on Dec. 8, 2018. China launched a rover early on Dec. 8 destined to land on the far side of the moon, a global first that would boost Beijing’s ambitions to become a space superpower, state media said.
STR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A Long March 3B rocket lifts off from the Xichang launch centre in Xichang in China’s southweste­rn Sichuan province early on Dec. 8, 2018. China launched a rover early on Dec. 8 destined to land on the far side of the moon, a global first that would boost Beijing’s ambitions to become a space superpower, state media said.

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