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Tag: Lunar Rover

  • China Moon Landing, China’s First Lunar Rover Landing On The Moon

    China is finally going to do something that the U.S. and Russia did 30 plus years ago, soft-land a rover on the moon. It looks as if it just might be successful.

    This rover, the Chang’e-3 also known by its nickname, “Jade Rabbit” is set to start exploring the moon on Sunday, giving China the recognition and credibility of a true space power and bringing them a step closer to putting a man on the moon.

    “This is a very significant step for their space program,” says Gregory Kulacki, who studies China’s efforts in space for the Union of Concerned Scientists. “It’s a prospecting mission, their first real chance to test whether there are mineral resources on the moon.”

    This rover has some pretty amazing tricks – it can see 300 feet under the surface by using a radar device designed to analyze rocks and identify minerals and other potentially useful elements that may lie under the lunar surface.

    The Chinese have long sought to mine the moon for useful minerals and elements. The prospect of mining the moon still inspires Chinese scientists as it once did American space enthusiasts, though some observers say the scientists are simply seeking justifications for their large budgets.

    The United Nations Moon Agreement, developed in 1979 restricts any country on earth – ownership of any resources found on the moons surface, or below the surface. However, China has never signed this agreement, nor has the U.S. for that matter. The US and the former Soviet Union are the only other two nations to complete successful soft – or controlled – lunar landings; the last was the Soviet Union in 1976.

    “Jade Rabbit” is named for a pet belonging to Chang’e the goddess of the moon in Chinese legend. The magnificent looking rover should be transmitting information back to earth for months to come. If everything goes as planned, China’s next mission to the moon will be to collect lunar materials, and bring them back for analysis.

    Just in case there is something the Chinese might be able to use here on earth.

    Image via YouTube

  • China To Deploy Moon Rover In 2013

    China is set to launch their third lunar probe next year. The probe will be called the chang’e-3 and it will be the first probe to have legs so that it can land safely on the moon’s irregular surface. A secure landing will be essential because the country has designed a moon rover which will be carried to the moon and set in motion by the probe.

    Ye Peijian, chief designer of the Chang’e missions comments on the new probe:

    “The probe will take more scientific equipment than its predecessors mainly to detect, collect and analyze samples on the moon,”

    Experts have mapped-out about half a dozen prime locations for the landing of the probe. Right now the moon’s Bay of Rainbows, formally called Sinus Iridum, is the primary target for set-down, but that could change as conditions change.

    The mission will be distinctively different than past missions because of the lunar rover. The rover will patrol the moon’s surface for ninety days collecting samples and mapping the topography, which will be one of the most difficult tasks.

    Ye comments:

    “It will be the most difficult part of the mission as the rover must avoid dropping into big holes on the moon and climb over some small pits and rocks,”

    It is unknown what the rover will be called or what it looks like. Apparently the Chinese public will name the rover sometime this year. How this will be done is also not mentioned.

    What is known is that the rover features a solar plate which will unfold during sunlight hours to absorb energy, but will retract and protect the rover’s vital power supply during the freezing darkness hours. All of its functions will be controlled by scientists on Earth.

    More details about the mission and the name of the rover will be revealed as 2012 unfolds. We will keep readers up to date on Chang’e-3 as more information becomes available.